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Ai Weiwei on Censorship

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A thought-provoking work by a singular voice, this short, sharp essay invites us to critically reconsider power, ideology and the boundaries of free speech

62 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 29, 2026

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About the author

Ai Weiwei

34 books76 followers
Ai Weiwei (Chinese: 艾未未; pinyin: Ài Wèiwèi, English pronunciation; born 28 August 1957) is a Chinese contemporary artist, documentarian, and activist. Ai grew up in the far northwest of China, where he lived under harsh conditions due to his father's exile.

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5 stars
17 (18%)
4 stars
44 (47%)
3 stars
23 (24%)
2 stars
7 (7%)
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2 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for alicia.
362 reviews11 followers
March 9, 2026
Maybe because I read this with a new lens influenced by the author’s recent changes to his thinking, but I didn’t love this. It made some good points about censorship and oppression but it was nothing groundbreaking. It also read more like an academic text. Given it was partnered with his speaking tour, it just felt like an accompaniment to that (I would have said money grab but it came with the tickets). A shame because I really enjoyed his other writing and there were more brilliant and interesting points in those.
29 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2026
This book was not what I wanted it to be, and nowhere close to it. For an artist and thinker who is so bold in combatting the authoritarian CCP regime, Ai’s 87-page essay feels insincere. Not because his commitment to fighting censorship actually is (I do not believe so), but because this book does nothing more than tickle the surface. Its insistence of critical thinking and individuality being the heart of what is targeted, distorted, and ultimately destroyed by censorship, surveillance, and AI evokes nothing more than the big letter slogan banners it critiques. I don’t think it’s overly harsh to say that this book does the very thing it warns that censorship results in — a lack of engagement in individuality, critical thinking, profound questioning of institutions of power. It does not engage in the vigilance that it undeniably demands its readers exercise.

Other than this fundamental lack, the read was overwhelmingly uninspiring. Ai was repeating the same empty statements over and over again, without giving them the substance that would inevitably help his cause. In other words, nothing is advanced this essay — no provocation of thought on the unparalleled significance of the topics he discusses, no explication of the processes and cases of censorship. Indeed, the failure to be specific (!!!!!!!) renders it powerless. It almost feels as if Ai is resigned to the forces he attributes as evil and corrupting. The failure to include specific instances of state pedagogical and discursive violence only further suppresses victims of censorship once again. If we who condemn censorship are also unable to name, point a finger at, and spotlight the people and issues we seek justice for, do we not just become participants in erasure of individual thought?

I guess the adage stands: don’t meet your heroes. Or in my case, don’t read their essays.
25 reviews
April 5, 2026
I got this book because my parents are huge Ai Weiwei fans and our first readings for Ed Studies are on free speech. Censorship is such a timely subject but this essay was underwhelming. Didn’t learn too much and felt generally surface level. Where it does succeed is the connecting of his personal experience under the Chinese authoritarian regime. Not enough of it though. I disagree with his views on artificial intelligence, seem reflective of the older generations. Interestingly, I can see the influence of Rousseau, society instantly indoctrinates. Also, power = control narrative. It’s interesting how censorship can transcend modern borders. Power.
Profile Image for Imogen.
28 reviews
February 18, 2026
Quite enjoyed Weiwei's thoughts on Censorship. The sections that stood out my me were his thoughts on Censorship and AI and Surveillance. Out of the book, these were the two that gave me the most to think about afterwards. I also enjoyed the imagery which was provocative and led me to watching the video Dumbass he did. I think this is a good book as a starting point to led to other ideas and too give the reader questions to ask themselves.

I would say this is worth an afternoon reading.
Profile Image for Zyssa.
390 reviews4 followers
April 28, 2026
“An interesting incident occurred when people tested the new AI tool by asking about me. The AI’s response was blunt: ‘Let’s talk about something else.’”

This essay was precisely to the point & illustrates very clearly Ai Weiwei’s lifelong stance on society.
Very insightful for an artist [saying this with no arrogance whatsoever omg] and put words on thoughts & frustrations I had for a moment now.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,381 reviews56 followers
Review of advance copy
January 29, 2026
This did not entirely live up to my expectations despite raising some interesting questions. The short form left it skimming over some topics more than I would have wanted. still it is a personal and interesting view of censorship.
24 reviews
March 2, 2026
There's a reason Ai Weiwei is best known for his visual mediums, but this essay was thought-provoking and well-structured. I found some parts a bit repetitive, but that can be essays for you, sometimes, can't it.
616 reviews3 followers
March 18, 2026
It`s not an objective book about censorship and its history, more like Ai Weiwei`s artistic thoughts and impressions about it including surveillance and the rise of AI.
Profile Image for Chloe Sowerby.
13 reviews
April 1, 2026
Definitely an artist and not a writer, really interesting premise and topic but all the points were largely the same/repetitive
8 reviews
May 5, 2026
Short. Thought provoking. I just really love this artist.
Profile Image for Cameron Blackshaw.
60 reviews
April 23, 2026
I picked this up when I went to see the man himself be interviewed by Stephen Sackur on stage a few months ago.

Ai Weiwei’s musings on the current state of censorship across both the East and the West are thought-provoking and unsettling, if a bit extreme at times.
Profile Image for Kate.
102 reviews12 followers
April 4, 2026
“Suddenly, you find yourself standing helpless in a vast wilderness, lost. Your sense of trust disappears, as we now inhabit fragmented realities and conflicting truths. In our quest for clarity, we have become disoriented. Our dependence on virtual reality grows to the point where the tangible world loses its significance. While our traditional understanding of size, shape, texture, temperature, sound, lines and light remains, these elements also exist in virtual reality, fundamentally altering our perception of existence.”
2 reviews
February 4, 2026
A book that contrasts greatly with Weiwei's personal style. With the scale of the concepts it discusses it is perhaps not even just succinct, but too short. However, it effectively argues its point on the pervasiveness of censorship, although with its length its argument that censorship is just as bad in the West needs more meat.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews