CCBC-Net Archives

[CCBC-Net] CENSORSHIP

From: Randall Wright <randall.w.wright>
Date: Mon, 8 Sep 2008 06:00:41 -0600

Jane,

One of my goals as a writer is to have a book challenged in libraries across the country. I will feel like a success then! But only if I can get librarians to back it (hint to the rest of you).

 

 

From: janeyolen at aol.com [mailto:janeyolen at aol.com] Sent: Monday, September 08, 2008 5:53 AM To: randall.w.wright at comcast.net; ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] CENSORSHIP

 

Of course I have heard of attempts to censor THE DEVIL'S ARITHMETIC because of its title before. (Devil=Hitler in this case. Sigh!)

But thanks for the discussion. Let's not get discussion mixed up with propaganda, however. And let's be sure of facts before we present them as truth because it does no one's cause any good to mix those up. Yes, it appears Palin was hypothetically testing the censorship waters viz her local librarian. Given her strong and extreme religious views, (end of world senarios, Alaska as a Refuge State etc.) I have no doubt she would have liked to impose her will on the library. But we have no list of books because there was--most likely--no exact list to be had. Just a hypothetical question about how to get certain books taken from the library. And a librarian whose job was saved because she served the community who felt she was doing good work. And Mayor Palin understood that. (And probably, though I do not know this as fact) did not have the authority to fire said librarian for such a reason anyway.

But we have all seen librarians around the country--and teachers, too--fired, driven out, thrown to the wolves for book choices. So it is something this group should be talking about. Discussion. Not propaganda.

 

Jane Yolen www.janeyolen.com

 

 

-----Original Message----- From: Randall Wright <randall.w.wright at comcast.net> To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu Sent: Mon, 8 Sep 2008 7:35 am Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] CENSORSHIP

By the mere fact that the issue was posted now, at this time, it does appear






as if the poster had a political agenda (but only she knows for sure). If






Pelan were not the VP candidate the issue would not have been brought up.






Why wasn't anything discussed about it when it happened? Because it was a






small town and nobody cared at the time (or at least nobody here heard of






it).













I am against most forms of censorship (more about that in the next






paragraph). I am not against discussing political issues on this list when






they are relevant to the purpose of this list--but then I'm not the owner of






the list, mostly just a lurker. Let's just call apples apples, shall we?













Unfortunately, there are plenty of cases of this kind of censorship in small






towns all across America (especially in my neck of the woods). Some of it is






because parents apply pressure to beleaguered librarians who have enough






trouble trying to decide themselves which books they have budget for. Other






cases are self-righteous civic leaders who think they know what's best for






us. Other times it's the librarians themselves who make decisions based on






their own biases. Sometimes there is covert censorship going on. For a book






I was writing, I was doing research on folk magic. Someone had removed a






reference book I needed. I'm guessing because it dealt with witchcraft.













Sometimes censorship is justified (I certainly don't think a terrorist's






handbook has a place in a public library, nor certain kinds of pornography)






and sometimes not. Who decides? I guess that's my question that comes out of






this whole discussion.













Who should decide what public funds should be spent on which books? And what






should the criteria be? Certainly a couple of irate women should not have






the power to ban a book from a library. This happened in a town in my






county. The books? The Devil's Arithmetic (they objected to the title),






anything by Christopher Paul Curtis (he advocates disrespect for






parents--and he had the word breast in one of his books), of course Harry






Potter, and I can't remember what else, but there were more (fortunately,






cooler heads eventually prevailed). Neither should public servants have






totalitarian control over the library's inventory. Librarians should not be






the only decision makers either (or should they?). Public referendum? Town






meetings? Committees? Focus groups? Dart board? More funds?













I don't envy librarians their responsibility, but I do envy their continuous






exposure to books of all kinds. Go librarians!













I know this issue has been discussed many times before (and really is






off-topic for the month). In fact, didn't we make some newspaper somewhere






for the discussion we had about censorship? Still, it is an interesting and






important topic, politics aside.













Randall Wright (mostly clueless, but middle-of-the-road (watch out for that






semi) opinionated none-the-less)



























-----Original Message-----






From: ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu






[mailto:ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of






Lbhcove at aol.com






Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 9:16 AM






To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu






Subject: [CCBC-Net] CENSORSHIP













Nancy is right on when she states:






 






"I don't think that anyone participating in the discussion






openly advocated voting one way or the other."






 






No one did!






 






Lee Bennett Hopkins



























AMERICA AT WAR (McElderry Books/Simon & Schuster)






_www.simonsays.com_ (http://www.simonsays.com/)



























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Received on Mon 08 Sep 2008 07:00:41 AM CDT