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#181 | |
Loves Ellipsis...
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In the states in which I have lived the entire community is invited to every single school board meeting. Every single one. If the community was so concerned about these books, someone would have showed up and made a case. When I was a student in high school a parent tried to get sex ed cancelled due to religious reasons. The parents and other member of the community had the agenda shut down. Parents also tried to have the high school name changed at one time - and the community had the agenda shut down. I can't imagine that this community has less power than the bible belt town I grew up in. These books were not burned. These books were not banned. No one will go to jail for reading them. The student needs parental permission. That is not a big deal. Reading this thread someone would think that the school board had secret meetings in a windowless basement that culminated in a book burning. |
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#182 |
monkey on the fringe
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I don't live there, so I really don't care what they do.
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#183 | |
Coffee Nut
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Read what you like and like what you read. ![]() |
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#184 | |
Loves Ellipsis...
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#185 |
Blueberry!
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Something we should always consider when a thread like this gets started is the larger picture. The ALA maintains statistics on banned books. Here's a graph I think most relevant to this thread:
![]() Ironically, the threads about banning books that I've seen really gain traction are those accusing religious groups of said banning. Seldom do we discuss the #1, #2, #3 and #4 reasons for banning books. From the original article, #1, #2, #3 and #4 are actually the reasons cited for the banning we're discussing, but the primary blame has been erroneously placed on "religion." Religion ranks extremely low, but takes up the majority of "bandwidth." It illustrates that it's a hot-button issue more than an actual issue. Another thing worth noting. We all have "major belief systems" (I don't have a good general term, sorry) -- things we're offended by, or think are socially imperative -- be we agnostic, atheistic, Christian, Jewish, racist, anti-racist, offended by language, etc. No matter your belief system, you can be assured of two things: 1) Someone sharing your belief system has successfully requested a book banning in the name of that belief system. 2) Someone opposed to your belief system has successfully requested a book banning because a book espoused your belief system. -Pie |
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#186 |
Grand Sorcerer
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If a religious group challenges a book because of offensive language, what challenge reason does the ALA record?
Funny... I find the numbers, the history and the graph largely irrelevant to this thread I started. I wasn't accusing any particular religious group (although I still think religion played more of a part than the school board is willing to admit here). I started the thread because I think it's completely ridiculous that anybody would have a problem with anyone over the age of thirteen reading Slaughterhouse 5. I still think that. I was accusing the school board of kowtowing to a vocal minority (in its reason for re-examining the book in the first place). Do they only re-examine the appropriate-ness of books after complaints are made? That hardly feels like a legitimate review system based solely on quantifiable criteria to me. With regards to your graph, how do we define the "challenger/challenge" elements in this particular case? If the challenger is deemed to be the initial complainant, then religion is certainly one of the reasons it was "challenged"... regardless of what reason was given for its "removal." Or should we simply ignore the fact that the challenge was issued in this particular case by someone who had clear religious differences with the book and allow the challenge reason to be tailor-fitted after the fact? Being able to pick and choose what the challenge reason was in each case sort of negates any trends that your graph might happen to show. ![]() "Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain who started this whole ugly affair... this is why we did it." No, the book may have been removed for all the correct-sounding, politically sanitized, legal reasons that this schoolboard can came up with to be able to sleep better at night, but--make no mistake--it was challenged for all the same old nefarious reasons that books have been burned for in the past. Plus, I'll never understand the attitude that just because it's determined that someone is within their legal rights to do something, that all discussion on said subject should simply cease. "Hey, it's legal and doesn't fit the strict definition of 'banning' or 'censorship' so everyone should just pipe down!" That dog won't hunt. Last edited by DiapDealer; 08-02-2011 at 07:57 AM. Reason: Typo |
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#187 |
Runs With Scissors
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The re-assessment of books in schools, and their subsequent removal from the curriculum and libraries, is not uncommon.
In every region in which I have worked as a teacher, books were selected by individual teachers and then approved by departments. The members of the school board, in most cases, had no idea which books were being taught to which grades. (They were busy with other things, and left all but the most sweeping curriculum decisions to the departmental heads and faculty.) Selecting books in this manner expedited things, and most of the time led to decisions that pleased all parties. But differences in opinion did sometimes arise, and when they did, this was the protocol for handling them:
I'm not sure there is a better way to handle this, at the moment. The parents have input into what their children are being taught, the community has a chance to give input, and the books are being reviewed in earnest. Even in cases in which the books end up removed from the curriculum and school library, there is no actual ban -- students are still welcome to read them and even have copies of them on campus. Not providing a book is not the same as banning it. (Or perhaps I am mistaken, and my local library is in fact the greatest book-banner in the history of mankind.) |
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#188 | |
Wizard
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From the comments on the article:
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#189 | |
Wizard
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#190 |
Runs With Scissors
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Apologies; I didn't mean to imply that I felt this particular case was handled properly. It absolutely wasn't. (Although, for the reasons stated above, I would still hesitate to call the result a true ban.)
I was merely trying to give some insight into how it is normally done, and how often, as the discussion seemed to be as much about the general practice of removing books from schools as it was this specific case. |
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#191 | |||||||
Blueberry!
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The numbers are indeed very relevant. The reasons given in the article fall under the first 4 most common reasons given in the graph. Yet, the primary accusation in this thread has been religion. Quote:
They developed criteria in April and applied those to the books. The article does not say anything beyond that, but the implication is that any books incoming will have to pass through the filter of those standards. Quote:
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Religion was the initial challenge, but the reasons for the removal were specifically the 4 most common reasons cited by the ALA. I am not suggesting we don't discuss religion, I am suggesting that we discuss the other 4 reasons which bear more weight than religion. Quote:
As I said, regardless of your belief system, you have had banning perpetrated against your system. The Nazi's are the most famous book burners, and it was an anti-Jewish, and therefore anti-religion. But, you can say that religion is the same old nefarious reason books were burned in this case; the Nazi's burned books because of religion. But saying it that way is a misdirection. The real reason the Nazi's burned books were because they hated Jews, they were anti-religion. That's an imperative in the discussion, since it is far more accurate than just throwing it under the blanket of "religion." Similarly, this thread has spent most time accusing religion as the reason for the book banning. But, again, it's a misdirection. The question was raised because of religion, but that was not why they were banned. Indeed, the reasons given for the ban are the 4 most common reasons books are banned! But we have spent hardly any time discussing any of those 4 (some talk of language and age appropriateness). Those 4 reasons are the imperative in this case, and we barely even breach them. If you are opposed to book banning (as I am), I would think we'd be better served to discusses the real reasons books are banned instead of focusing on a far less common reason. Quote:
In this thread, the dog may be hunting, but it's hunting the entirely wrong animal. -Pie Last edited by EatingPie; 08-02-2011 at 12:11 PM. |
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#192 |
Wizard
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#193 |
Wizard
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One thing to consider, may be the difference between stated reason, and true motive or belief. Yeah, the ALA shows that most aren't openly due to religious belief, but they don't track what may be the reason behind what was stated. You can still have religious reasoning as to why something may be inappropriate for an age group, or may be that you're simply claiming it is inappropriate for an age group as an easier way to get something blocked. If you come straight out and say that you want something blocked or removed because your religious beliefs are offended, you're going to fight more of an up hill battle than if you say you believe it isn't appropriate for children.
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#194 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I do agree with you that if religion did not honestly play a part in the book's removal, then religion need not be discussed—and in fact may be confusing the issue. Unfortunately, in order to accept the fact that religion only kick-started the process and wasn't used as review criteria, I have to take the word of people I don't know. And frankly, I just don't trust anyone who determined that Slaughterhouse Five wasn't age appropriate reading material for 13-17 year-olds—based on content alone. Period. |
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#195 | |
Wizard
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