Did you know that books are still being banned today? According to the ALA website, "Five of the 10 titles on the Top Ten list were removed from the location where the challenge took place. On average, OIF (Office of Intellectual Freedom) finds that 10% of challenges result in the removal of the book."
From September 24th through September 30th is Banned Books Week, the American Library Association's celebration of the freedom to read. Banned Books Week has special significance to me because my own high school banned books while I was a student there, and this became the 1982 Supreme Court case Island Trees School District v. Pico. Did you know that books are still being banned today? According to the ALA website, "Five of the 10 titles on the Top Ten list were removed from the location where the challenge took place. On average, OIF (Office of Intellectual Freedom) finds that 10% of challenges result in the removal of the book." Some terminology from ALA: "A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, based upon the objections of a person or group. A banning is the removal of those materials. Challenges do not simply involve a person expressing a point of view; rather, they are an attempt to remove material from the curriculum or library, thereby restricting the access of others. As such, they are a threat to freedom of speech and choice." For more information about Banned Books Week, visit ALA's website.
Bobbi
9/28/2017 02:42:01 pm
Words have power... an excellent discussion! Thank you! What gets me is things like Harry Potter are challenged. Like anyone actually thinks such books are real. Or, it's the whole supernatural element. I mean, I get why someone might object to books that are too explicit for children. (And in those cases, parental permission should be sought.) But most of the challenges to books just seem silly. 9/29/2017 11:08:07 pm
This reminds of the other week when I was a vendor at Oktoberfest. A teacher took my card and said she was looking for books to buy and would like to support a local author. I gave her some info about my books, and when I said Snapshots had LGBT content, she said she'd probably have to skip it because of that. We both agreed it was silly and wouldn't be the kids having issue but a parent. 9/30/2017 08:00:20 am
Sometimes it's such a fine line between banned books and great classics. For example, Catcher in the Rye and Lord of the Flies were both banned in the fifties but were also required high school reading for many decades. Seems the very subject that catches a publisher's eye can also evoke great passion in those who ban. Important post, Yvonne! 10/3/2017 01:48:15 pm
It's pretty disturbing and something that needs more attention, especially with things like LGBT stories. But as Marcia says, history has shown that many of the greatest classics have been banned. It will make people more curious to read it. Comments are closed.
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