<p>¿The law of libel is the instrument of censorship by which dignity¿too often pseudo-dignity¿is to be upheld.¿ That is Michael Rubinstein¿s definition in his introduction to this lively and authoritative account <i>Wicked, Wicked Libels</i> (originally published in 1972) of the libel situation in Britain.</p><p>The contributors are all actively concerned about libel as a living issue. Michael Rubinstein writes first about ¿the popular appetite for scandal¿, and the other contributors view libel from various angles. H. Montgomery Hyde looks at the law of libel itself, Louis Blom-Cooper writes about the conflicts between freer speech and privacy, and Anthony Lincoln discusses the problems facing legal advisers to the press. William Kimber, Richard Ingrams and Cecil H. King look at the subject from the publisher¿s point of view. Eugene Gros writes as a successful plaintiff, Louis A. Abraham looks at defamation as contempt of Parliament, and Michael Rubinstein contributes a chapter on bo