This Sunday, September 21, marked the beginning of Banned Books Week which celebrates the freedom to read. An annual event organized by the American Library Association, (the same people that award the Caldecott and Newbery Medals) , Banned Books Week is sponsored by a number of organizations who are against censorship. The website presents a wealth of information on books that are and have been banned, by whom and why, plus activities for teachers to discuss the important issues of censorship, banned books and the books themselves with their students. Additional information on Banned Books Week can be found on the ALA’s own site. On this site you can also find the 10 most frequently challenged books by year. In 2001, the most frequently challenged book was Harry Potter with John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men right behind.
The most common reasons for censorship are drugs, nudity, violence, offensive language, sexually explicit, anti-family, homosexuality, racism, religious viewpoint, suicide and unsuited to age group but there are a few others.
A fascinating article on BuzzFeed is about fifteen children’s classics that have been banned, where and why. This includes James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl, Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White, Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne and Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak. Granted some of these were banned quite some time ago, and some by local municipalities, but some were banned as recently as 2010.
I don’t know about you, but I find this all fascinating. Censorship is no small issue, and the facts about who censors which books and why is an insight into the fabric of this country – what we, as a people, are afraid of, offended by and threatened by to such a degree that we can’t allow our children to read about it. As best I can tell, it’s usually the truth.
I don’t think I knew that any of these were banned or challenged. Thanks for telling me, Jeanne.
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My pleasure. I don’t think most people are aware of how many books are banned or challenged. Banned Books Week attempts to change that, so spread the word! 🙂
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Banning books is a means of thought control and psychological oppression.
Hi.
Any thoughts on that Library Card?
🙂
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It certainly is. Hiya. None of my libraries have Cultivating Stillness, I found, and The Library Card was wonderful. Stay tuned — I believe I’m going to do a blog post on it. 🙂
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I look forward to your post. Don’t hesitate to drop a link at my blogcasa to give me a heads up.
As for Stillness—no biggie. You might look for it in a used bookstore or ? 🙂
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I will definitely let you know when I do a post on The Library Card. Stillness may cross my path in some unexpected way … one never knows, right?
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Indeed, one never does know. 🙂
The Library Card is a great piece of writing–glad you found it full of wonder.
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