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The freedom to read and openly discuss literature is still at risk today

Efforts to restrict access to books 鈥 or even burn them 鈥 may seem like relics of the past. Unfortunately, that isn鈥檛 the case. Today, we鈥檙e honoring by looking at recent challenges to the freedom to read in the United States and abroad.
Looking to challenge your knowledge about the history of book banning? Take 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Banned Books Week quiz.
Controversies and challenges at U.S. colleges and high schools
As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 case history shows, college campuses have not been immune from book controversies. Shortly after Banned Books Week in 2019, an incident at Georgia Southern University served as a reminder that education about engagement with difficult or controversial reading material is still vital. Last October, some Georgia Southern students burned copies of 鈥淢ake Your Home Among Strangers,鈥 required reading in some first-year classes, following author Jennine Cap贸 Crucet鈥檚 lecture on campus. The book burning sparked widespread criticism, and Georgia Southern President Kyle Marrero sent the following to the university community:
From what we have been able to determine, the night鈥檚 events were another example of freedom of expression and a continuing debate of differing ideas, which are tenets of our ongoing efforts to align with our values and initiatives encompassing inclusive excellence. Specific to the reported events of that evening, while it鈥檚 within the students鈥 First Amendment rights, book burning does not align with Georgia Southern鈥檚 values nor does it encourage the civil discourse and debate of ideas.
Marrero鈥檚 message was spot on. 果冻传媒app官方鈥 expressive act of burning books is itself protected by the First Amendment. But any would-be book burners should consider learning about the ugly of book burning, as well as more constructive ways to engage with, rather than incinerate, difficult reading material.
The incident at Georgia Southern was not the only one that caught 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 attention last year. In Aug. 2019, FIREwrote to The New School after professor Laurie Sheck was summoned to a mandatory meeting with the university鈥檚 director of labor relations due to 鈥渟tudent complaints made under the University鈥檚 discrimination policy鈥 after she led a class discussion about the writings of literary icon James Baldwin.
While discussions about reading material on difficult topics, like race and bigotry, can prove controversial or uncomfortable, classrooms like Sheck鈥檚 are precisely where those conversations should be fostered.
Earlier that year, Sheck had assigned 鈥,鈥 a 1962 essay in which Baldwin asserted that Americans have 鈥渕odified or suppressed and lied about all the darker forces in our history鈥 and must commit to 鈥渁 long look backward whence we came and an unflinching assessment of the record.鈥 In Sheck鈥檚 graduate seminar, the class discussed Baldwin鈥檚 statement, 鈥淚 am not your nigger,鈥 which he made during a guest appearance on The Dick Cavett Show. Sheck noted that the title of the Oscar-nominated 2016 documentary based on Baldwin鈥檚 writings, 鈥,鈥 intentionally altered Baldwin鈥檚 words. She asked the class what this change may reveal about Americans鈥 ability to reckon with what Baldwin identified as 鈥渢he darker forces of history.鈥 Just days after 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter reminding The New School of Sheck鈥檚 academic freedom rights, the university reversed course and determined that Sheck did not violate university policy.
While discussions about reading material on difficult topics, like race and bigotry, can prove controversial or uncomfortable, classrooms like Sheck鈥檚 are precisely where those conversations should be fostered. The same can be said for K-12 classrooms 鈥 which all too often prove to be targets of book removal demands.
This April, the school board of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough School District in Alaska earned a healthy dose of criticism when it to remove five books 鈥 鈥淭he Things They Carried,鈥 鈥業 Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,鈥 鈥淐atch-22,鈥 鈥淚nvisible Man,鈥 and 鈥淭he Great Gatsby鈥 鈥 from a high school reading list. Regarding the then-removed books, board member Jeff Taylor asked, 鈥淚s there a reason that we include books that we even label as controversial in our curriculum? I would prefer that these were gone.鈥 Another board member, Jim Hart, 鈥渟aid that he had not read Fitzgerald鈥檚 鈥楾he Great Gatsby鈥 since high school and had used Sparknotes to research the controversial books rather than reading them.鈥
The National Coalition Against Censorship and other advocacy groups the school district that 鈥淸b]asing curricular decisions on fears of controversy presents the danger of viewpoint discrimination and is, therefore, not only educationally misguided, but also constitutionally suspect.鈥 The indie-rock group stepped in too, to send copies of the books to affected students. Fortunately, the board its decision in May.
Just this month, NCAC had to warn more high schools about book bans. California鈥檚 Burbank Unified School District teachers 鈥 apparently against district regulations 鈥 to stop teaching books including 鈥淗uckleberry Finn鈥 and 鈥淭o Kill A Mockingbird鈥 while a challenge against them is under review. And in Nevada, Palo Verde High School鈥檚 principal reportedly 鈥淔un Home鈥 鈥 a common target of book bans, even on college campuses 鈥 from an English honors reading list in response to a complaint, also in violation of district policy.
Book censorship abroad
The United States is far from the only country that experiences challenges to literature 鈥 and in some parts of the world, the situation is dire. China鈥檚 for Hong Kong, which was imposed in late June, has already had an effect on the freedom to read. The law is likely one of the most severe threats to freedom of expression today, and offers serious consequences for political expression that falls under vague bans on 鈥渟eparatism鈥 and 鈥渟ubversion.鈥
It didn鈥檛 take long for Hong Kong鈥檚 libraries and schools to feel the toll. In July, within days of the law鈥檚 passage, education officials schools 鈥渢o review their book collections and immediately remove those titles that might breach鈥 the law, and Hong Kong鈥檚 libraries books authored by pro-democracy figures so they could 鈥渂e reviewed to see if they violate the new law.鈥
France, too, had a brush with book censorship this summer when adviser to France鈥檚 gender equality ministry Ralph Zurm茅ly book publisher Monstrograph with legal action over the book, 鈥淚 Hate Men,鈥 which 鈥渆xplores whether women have good reason to hate men.鈥 Zurm茅ly wrote:
This book is obviously an ode to misandry (= hatred of men), both in terms of the summary on your site and in reading its title. I would like to remind you that incitement to hatred on the basis of sex is a criminal offence! Consequently, I ask you to immediately remove this book from your catalogue under penalty of criminal prosecution[.]
The Guardian that, after Zurm茅ly鈥檚 threat, over 2,500 copies of the book were sold, leading the publisher to issue two reprints. The author, Pauline Harmange, had 鈥渆xpected it to sell at the most a couple of hundred copies among friends and readers of her blog.鈥
If anything, this effort to ban 鈥淚 Hate Men鈥 offers a helpful reminder to other would-be censors that, rather than achieving their goals, they鈥檙e more likely to experience the Streisand effect. Hopefully more of them learn this lesson before next year鈥檚 Banned Books Week.
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