Shame on me! I missed Banned Books Week 2021, held this year between September 26 and October 2. In its honor, I will repeat (with some edits) my Banned Weeks Post from 2017. This year's theme was "Censorship Divides Us"
So sad that everything I said in 2017 (noting some updates) is still true.
And now the post, with some edits (including a more recent banned books list than I had in the 2017 post.)
It is said that the Chinese symbol for "crisis" combines their
symbols for "danger" and "opportunity". It's not true, but it sounds
good.
It seems we live in a state of constant crisis, which is why I try to
keep world events out of my blog. But it's hard. Disasters all over the world. Political crises, with our world edging closer to
possible destruction. Climate change.
In the United States, everything has become
political. We are all, it seems, in crisis mode, with "breaking news"
appearing on our television screens multiple times a day. We are even
questioning some of our core values, which
isn't necessarily a bad thing. And then there is reading.
Reading is safe, right? Not so fast.
One article I read recently, about our local public libraries, point out that libraries are political, some
more than others. This is true, and we should also keep in mind that
libraries are in the forefront of fights against censorship.
NaNoWriMo,
National Novel Writing Month (which I have participated in several
times), sent its participants an email several months before this post was written. It reads, in part:
So now, an organization devoted to encouraging people to write, and express themselves, finds themselves having to take a political position.As a creative writing nonprofit, we’re not a political organization. We don’t endorse candidates or support any particular party. In an ideal world, we would focus only on empowering people to write.Yet we find ourselves in a time where people’s ability to tell their stories—and even to safely exist—is at stake.NaNoWriMo strives to be a gateway and sanctuary for people’s voices. Our guiding belief is that every person’s story matters, and we celebrate the inclusion of all religions, races, genders, sexualities, and countries of origin. We help people find a safe space to be who they are—creators, storytellers, and world changers.....
You might be surprised to know what books you have read that have been targets of censorship or outright attempts to ban them. It isn't just this year, or last. This is the "top 10" list of 2010 (quoting from the ALA website:)
Top 10 for 2010
Out of 348 challenges recorded by the Office for Intellectual Freedom
- And Tango Makes Three, by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson
Reasons: homosexuality, religious viewpoint, unsuited to age group - The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
Reasons: offensive language, racism, sex education, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence - Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley
Reasons: insensitivity, offensive language, racism, sexually explicit - Crank, by Ellen Hopkins
Reasons: drugs, offensive language, sexually explicit - The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins
Reasons: sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence - Lush, by Natasha Friend
Reasons: drugs, offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group - What My Mother Doesn't Know, by Sonya Sones
Reasons: sexism, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group - Nickel and Dimed, by Barbara Ehrenreich
Reasons: drugs, inaccurate, offensive language, political viewpoint, religious viewpoint - Revolutionary Voices, edited by Amy Sonnie
Reasons: homosexuality, sexually explicit - Twilight, by Stephenie Meyer
Reasons: religious viewpoint, violence
I've read several of these. Many are considered classics. Judy Blume has appeared on this list, as has John Greene, just to name two best selling authors beloved by children/teens.
UPDATE: The 10 most challenged books of 2020. As clickbait writers like to say, "Some of them will surprise you!"
If I were an author, I would love nothing better than to be in the company on this list.
How can you participate in Banned Books Week? It takes a visit to a local
library, or, better yet, reading a book on the list. Banned Books Week may be over, but our fight is not. Because, dear reader, words have power. Even
the words of this blog.
That's why authoritarian regimes practice censorship. They know knowledge is power. That's why freedom of speech (including freedom to write) is so important. We must be exposed to different viewpoints and not stay in our little bubbles (as comforting as it might be nowadays).
Thank you to the courageous librarians and others who fight censorship, and those who fight to keep our freedoms to read as we choose.
...some want to get the matches out.
ReplyDeleteI read two of the books on your list. They were very thought provoking.
ReplyDeleteBooks and ideas should not be banned.
My library system had a Banned Books Bingo activity I completed. One of the squares was blackout poetry from a banned book. I used Winnie the Pooh! Yes, even Pooh was banned and challenged over the years. He's naked (so are the others, but apparently a fat bear bottom is worse than a donkey with a pinned on tail), there are talking animals (offensive to some Christians) and a pig (some Muslims and Jewish groups were upset, although I thought that was dietary, and no one eats Piglet). Unless that thinking is offensive itself, I'm not sure. If so, I am sorry. Is just having a pig character not acceptable? I had posts on my poetry and my book review blog. Somehow I missed posting to my usual blog.
ReplyDeleteI interned (library science) at a Juvenile hall library (one of only 6 in the US at the time) and there were challenged books. Sometimes one of a long series of anime. Then ALL the books in the series had to be read to determine if they would be banned. Maybe if those kids could read what they wanted (and it was a public library, so there was nothing like porn!), they'd be better off! Some of them told me they had never been to a library before incarceration! Sorry for the rant, banned books fires me up!
I was just watching that movie on the origin of Wonder Woman last night. There was a scene where people were burning the comic book. It's amazing what gets banned and for what reasons.
ReplyDeleteYou'd think by now that I'd stop being surprised by this, and the fact that some people just don't like the free exchange of any ideas other than their own. But these lists serve a great purpose because the books get MORE attention as a result. Thanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteI'm very sad at the state of so many of our sacred institutions. Carol C
ReplyDeleteI always hark back to the scene in Indiana Jones: The Last Crusade where they are burning books. Knowledge is control and if you can control what knowledge other people have access to, you have control of them. I have never understood this concept and really, really don't want to!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Alana!
Great post! As writers and thinkers we should all be open to what gets into print. People objected to their kids reading Sherman Alexie's book. It always astounds me that parents THINK their kids live in a vacuum. I taught high school. Kids know MORE than their parents.
ReplyDeleteNow I have a new reading list. (OK, Aldous Huxley has been in my library for decades, but the rest...)
ReplyDelete"The Hunger Games" is adult content but the first/title volume is sex-free. And "Nickel & Dimed"--because she admits her socialism is a religion? Daaaang.
ReplyDeleteBut have you seen the Daily Mail's list of currently banned books (at least banned for kids)? From "Little House on the Prairie" to Dr. Seuss...basically if any baby-boomer liked it or might want to share it with a kid, some idjits want to ban it. I'd recommend checking out those books too.