The marketing message “The one they tried to ban” is a potent one, not only exploited by the music business but by publishers also. When ex-spymaster Peter Wright attempted to publish his memoirs in 1985 he came up against the might of the British government which went to court in an attempt to suppress publication (Norton-Taylor 1988).
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Similarly, sales of JK Rowling's Harry Potter books were buoyed by regular media reports that it was the most banned book in America (Capon and Scott 2013): Rowling’s publishers have also been adept at exploiting other aspects of psychological reactance theory - in particular carefully withholding information from the media and giving the appearance that there would be restricted supplies of the books available (Brown 2001).
References
Brown, Stephen (2001), “Torment your customers (they'll love it)”, Harvard Business Review, October
Capon, Felicity and Catherine Scott (2013), “Top 20 books they tried to ban”, The Daily Telegraph, 1 March
Norton-Taylor, Richard (1988), “Newspapers win Spycatcher battle”, The Guardian, 14 October
Pauli, Michelle (2005), “Vatican appoints official Da Vinci Code debunker”, The Guardian, 15 March
Zuckerman, Laurence (1987), “Press: how not to silence a spy”, Time Magazine, 17 August