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Banned Books Week

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Title: Banned Books Week


1
Banned Books Week
  • September 26 to October 4, 2009

2
What does it mean to ban a book?
  • Banning a book is when a person or group decides
    that a book is so inappropriate in some way that
    NO ONE should read the book. Then the person or
    group has the book removed from the shelves of
    libraries.

3
How does a book get banned?
  • An individual or group files a formal challenge
    with a school or library, requesting that a book
    or material be removed
  • The school or library forms a committee to review
    the material
  • The committee votes on if the material should be
    removed or retained
  • If the material is kept on the shelf, the person
    filing the complaint may file another complaint
    with the court system, which then will review the
    case

4
From WHERE are books banned?
  • Just because a book may be banned in one
    location, that does NOT mean it is banned
    everywhere. We call books banned books if they
    have been banned somewhere.
  • Here at CCHS, we have not banned any books from
    our media center. The public library in Moultrie
    has had only one challenge in the last 35 years
    ago and the book was moved to the adult section
    from the teen section of the library, not removed
    from the library.

5
How often are books banned?
  • In 2007, there were 420 REPORTED challenges. A
    challenge is defined as a formal, written
    complaint, filed with a library or school
    requesting that materials be removed because of
    content or appropriateness.
  • A book is challenged if someone requests that it
    be removed from library shelves.
  • A book is banned if the library or school agrees
    to remove it from circulation.

6
Why are books challenged or banned?
  • Books usually are challenged to protect others,
    frequently children, from difficult ideas and
    information.
  • Most librarians see challenges as grounded in
    good intention and pure in conviction, but they
    are ultimately illegal and restrictive.

7
Why are books challenged or banned?The ISSUES
  • Family values
  • (including religious values)
  • Political values
  • Intellectual freedom

8
Official Book Censorship
  • Librorum Prohibitorum, in effect by the Catholic
    Church from 1557-1966
  • Pope Paul IV issued the first of 42 indices to
    guide censors in what could be published. Books
    were not to be published without official
    permission from the Catholic Church (Galileos
    book was banned and he was subject of inquisition
    for saying the sun is the center of universe)
  • The Soviet Union banned books with political
    philosophies other than Communist
  • China and Iran still ban books today, as well as
    other governments

9
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10
Why not ban books?Americans 1st Amendment
rights--
  • Congress shall make no law respecting an
    establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
    free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
    of speech, or of the press or the right of the
    people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
    government for a redress of grievances.

11
Whats wrong with Banning Books?
  • Books provide education on a wide variety of
    subjects and the opportunity to have an
    experience vicariously
  • Without a wide variety of views, change cannot
    occur within a society
  • Books such as To Kill a Mockingbird and I know
    why the Caged Bird Sings provide valuable
    information on racism and the effect it has on a
    society

12
Effects of Banning Books
  • Without the Anne Franks Diary of a Young Girl,
    we would not understand as well how the Holocaust
    affected persecuted people
  • Without The Scarlet Letter, how would we
    understand puritan society and how it operated?
  • Without Fahrenheit 451, how would you understand
    what effect burning books has on a person and how
    the desire for banned items increases their
    interest and mystery?

13
  • In other words, reading is an opportunity to
    experience an event without actually living
    through it.

14
Should other people decide what
YOU read?
  • Parents and teachers are responsible for helping
    you select reading materials while they are still
    responsible for you. As an adult, you will have
    the freedom to read books of your choice and to
    decide what your children may or may not read.

15
What books have been banned?
  • Banned for depictions of sex, racism, and violence

BANNED!
16
What books have been banned?
  • Offensive language

BANNED!
17
What books have been banned?
  • Ordered BURNED in East St. Louis for indecency
    and obscenityit actually was restricted to
    adults only instead of being burned

BANNED!
18
What books have been banned?
  • Banned in a number of places over the years
    because of objections to the language used and
    the perception that the book promotes racism

BANNED!
19
What books have been banned?
  • Fahrenheit 451 is about book burning and the
    effect that banning or censoring books has on a
    society

BANNED!
20
What books have been banned?
  • Many have objected to the magical content in
    this book, claiming it promotes witchcraft and
    evil content. (It was written by the daughter of
    Christian missionaries.)

BANNED!
21
What books have been banned?
  • Some people feel that this book promotes the use
    of illegal drugs.

BANNED!
22
What books have been banned?
  • This book was banned because there is a wine
    bottle in the basket on the cover of the book.
    Some people felt it promoted drinking alcoholic
    beverages (California, 1989)

BANNED!
23
What books have been banned?
  • Many have objected to the magical content in
    this book, and the other Harry Potter books,
    claiming it promotes witchcraft and evil content.

BANNED!
24
What books have been banned?
  • This book was banned for encouraging
    inappropriate behavior

BANNED!
25
What books have been banned?
  • Banned for inappropriate content, promotion of
    cannibalism

BANNED!
26
What books have been banned?
  • Banned in some schools and libraries because
    inappropriate pictures

BANNED!
27
What books have been banned?
  • Banned in some places because the book is about
    an unconventional penguin family. The book is
    a true story, based on penguins in the Central
    Park Zoo.

BANNED!
28
What books have been banned?
  • Banned in some schools and libraries because of
    content about the logging industrycriminalizes
    the forestry industry

BANNED!
29
10 Most Challenged Books of 2007
  • And Tango Makes Three / Richardson and Parnell
  • The Chocolate War / Cormier
  • Olives Ocean / Henkes
  • The Golden Compass / Pullman
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn / Twain

30
  • The Color Purple / Walker
  • TTYL / Myracle
  • I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings / Angelou
  • Its Perfectly Normal / Harris
  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower / Chobsky

31
5 Most Challenged Books of 2008
  • 1. "And Tango Makes Three," by Justin
    Richardson/Peter ParnellReasons Anti-Ethnic,
    Anti-Family, Homosexuality, Religious Viewpoint,
    Unsuited to Age Group
  • 2. "His Dark Materials Trilogy" (Series), Philip
    PullmanReasons  Political Viewpoint, Religious
    Viewpoint, Violence
  • 3. "TTYL" "TTFN" "L8R, G8R" (Series), Lauren
    MyracleReasons  Offensive Language, Sexually
    Explicit, Unsuited to Age Group
  • 4. "Scary Stories" (Series), Alvin
    SchwartzReasons  Occult/Satanism, Religious
    Viewpoint, Violence
  • 5. "Bless Me, Ultima," by Rudolfo AnayaReasons 
    Occult/Satanism, Offensive Language, Religious
    Viewpoint, Sexually Explicit, Violence
  • (Huck Finn was not on the list for the first time
    in many years.)

32
Court Cases(Foundations of Free Speech)
  • The Right to Read Freely
  • Evans v. Selma Union High School District of
    Fresno County, 222 P. 801 (Ca. 1924)
  • The California State Supreme Court held that the
    King James version of the Bible was not a
    "publication of a sectarian, partisan, or
    denominational character" that a State statute
    required a public high school library to exclude
    from its collections. The "fact that the King
    James version is commonly used by Protestant
    Churches and not by Catholics" does not "make its
    character sectarian," the court stated. "The mere
    act of purchasing a book to be added to the
    school library does not carry with it any
    implication of the adoption of the theory or
    dogma contained therein, or any approval of the
    book itself, except as a work of literature fit
    to be included in a reference library."

33
Court Cases (Foundations of Free Speech)
  • Rosenberg v. Board of Education of City of New
    York, 92 N.Y.S.2d 344 (Sup. Ct. Kings County
    1949)
  • After considering the charge that Oliver
    Twist and the Merchant of Venice are
    "objectionable because they tend to engender
    hatred of the Jew as a person and as a race," the
    Supreme Court, Kings County, New York, decided
    that these two works cannot be banned from the
    New York City schools, libraries, or classrooms,
    declaring that the Board of Education "acted in
    good faith without malice or prejudice and in the
    best interests of the school system entrusted to
    their care and control, and, therefore, that no
    substantial reason exists which compels the
    suppression of the two books under consideration."

34
Court Cases for Free Speech
  • Minarcini v. Strongsville (Ohio) City School
    District, 541 F.2d 577 (6th Cir. 1976)
  • The Strongsville City Board of Education rejected
    faculty recommendations to purchase Joseph
    Heller's Catch-22 and Kurt Vonnegut's God Bless
    You, Mr. Rosewater and ordered the removal of
    Catch-22 and Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle from the
    library. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth
    Circuit ruled against the School Board, upholding
    the students' First Amendment right to receive
    information and the librarian's right to
    disseminate it. "The removal of books from a
    school library is a much more serious burden upon
    the freedom of classroom discussion than the
    action found unconstitutional in Tinker v. Des
    Moines School District."

35
Court Cases(Freedom of Expression in Schools)
  • Zykan v. Warsaw (Indiana) Community School
    Corporation and Warsaw School Board of Trustees,
    631 F.2d 1300 (7th Cir. 1980)
  • A student brought suit seeking to reverse school
    officials' decision to "limit or prohibit the use
    of certain textbooks, to remove a certain book
    from the school library, and to delete certain
    courses from the curriculum." The district court
    dismissed the suit. On appeal, the Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that the
    school board has the right to establish a
    curriculum on the basis of its own discretion,
    but it is forbidden to impose a "pall of
    orthodoxy." The right of students to file
    complaints was recognized, but the court held
    that the students' claims "must cross a
    relatively high threshold before entering upon
    the field of a constitutional claim suitable for
    federal court litigation."

36
Court Cases(1st Amendment rights of minors)
  • 1 See Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville, 422 U.S.
    205 (1975) "Speech that is neither obscene as to
    youths nor subject to some other legitimate
    proscription cannot be suppressed solely to
    protect the young from ideas or images that a
    legislative body thinks unsuitable for them. In
    most circumstances, the values protected by the
    First Amendment are no less applicable when
    government seeks to control the flow of
    information to minors."  See also Tinker v. Des
    Moines School Dist., 393 U.S.503 (1969) West
    Virginia Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624
    (1943) AAMA v. Kendrick,. 244 F.3d 572 (7th Cir.
    2001).

37
Reading is a joy, a privilege, and the right of
every student. If a book is unappealing or
offensive to you in any way, please return it and
select another. You, the students, know which
reading materials best serve you and your own
standards, reading level, and beliefs.
38
What to do about banning books?
  • Exercise your rights! Read a banned book today
  • Talk to your neighbors about why everyone should
    be allowed to choose for themselves and their
    families what they read

39
For more information
  • If you want to know more, visit the ALA website
    on challenged and banned books, or read Banned
    Books 2007 Resource Guide by Robert P. Doyle
  • Houle, Michelle M. Mark Twain, Banned,
    Challenged, and Censored. Enslow Publishers,
    Berkeley Heights, NJ. 2008.
  • Doyle, Robert P. Banned Books 2007 Resource
    Book. American Library Association, Chicago,
    2007.
  • http//www.firstamendmentcenter.org/default.aspx

40
Colquitt County High School
  • Cheryl Youse, Media Specialist
  • Presentation Revised April, 2009
  • www.colquitt.k12.ga.us/cchsmedia/documents.htm
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