Sunday, November 14, 2021

Burning The Books

American schools are being confronted by a new generation of book burners. Michelle Goldberg writes:

Virginia’s Spotsylvania County School Board this week voted unanimously to have books with “sexually explicit” material removed from school library shelves. For two members of the school board, this didn’t go far enough; they wanted to see the books incinerated. “I’m sure we’ve got hundreds of people out there that would like to see those books before we burn them,” said one of the members, Kirk Twigg. “Just so we can identify, within our community, that we are eradicating this bad stuff.”

This was just one example of an aggressive new censoriousness tearing through America, as the campaign against critical race theory expands into a broader push to purge school libraries of books that affront conservative sensibilities regarding race and gender. Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, told me that during her 20 years with the organization, “there’s always been a steady hum of censorship, and the reasons have shifted over time. But I’ve never seen the number of challenges we’ve seen this year.”

And the targets are not just recently published books:

In Texas and South Carolina, Republican governors have called for action on “obscene” content in school libraries. Public schools in Virginia Beach have pulled books including Toni Morrison’s “The Bluest Eye” out of their libraries pending the results of a challenge by conservative school board members. 

Many of the books being targeted are about members of marginalized communities:

Ashley Hope Pérez’s award-winning “Out of Darkness,” about a romance between a Mexican American girl and a Black boy set against Texas’ 1937 New London school explosion, came out in 2015. Until this year Pérez, a former high school English teacher who is now an assistant professor at Ohio State University, hadn’t heard of any controversy around it. But now her book is regularly denounced by school culture warriors. The group No Left Turn in Education, which was founded last year to fight critical race theory in schools, has it on a list of books that are “indoctrinating kids to a dangerous ideology.”

In September, a Texas anti-mask activist named Kara Bell read a passage from “Out of Darkness” at a school board meeting. The scene she chose was one in which a gang of racist white students sexually demean the Mexican heroine.

Bell quoted the characters making a slang reference to anal sex, words that left her appalled. “I do not want my children to learn about anal sex in middle school!” she cried. “I’ve never had anal sex! I don’t want to have anal sex! I don’t want my kids having anal sex!”

The Right is on a tear -- convinced that God is on their side. And, in His name, they're marching backward -- into the Dark Ages.

Image: The Washington Post


10 comments:

Lorne said...

Soon, Owen, the country will devolve into a full-blown theocracy. That should comfort people like Kara Bell, who will no longer have to fear any rear-guard action.

Northern PoV said...

Competing headlines right at the top of WAPO tell the same sad story.

on the left side of the page

"After going dark on climate stage, U.S. reclaims leadership role at COP26"

and on the right

"Biden approval hits new low"

iow "we are toast - wet toast"

Owen Gray said...

Americans would do well to remember Abraham Lincoln's comment, Lorne: "I don't know if I'm on God's side. But I hope he's on mine." Unfortunately, his party has forgotten him.

Owen Gray said...

Increasingly, PoV, it's clear that the Americans are toast.

The Disaffected Lib said...

The other day I revisited Sebastian Haffner's "Defying Hitler." It's a memoir of a young man from an upper middle class family coming of age in Germany in the 30s. Haffner was part of a crowd of equally privileged, liberal-minded young Germans, Christians and Jews, who enjoyed a grand life. Then it details how most of them were gradually but inexorably transformed into ardent Nazis in a pattern that can be seen in America's radical right today.

Now we have this, book burnings. If you can object to books on sexual content, real or imagined, you'll soon turn on books that are racially or politically "unacceptable." Beyond that it's brown shirts, jackboots and Sam Brown belts. I don't think this is a passing fad.

Owen Gray said...

There is an ugliness here that runs very deep, Mound. There have always been book burners in the United States -- but they have tended to be regional. This has the feel of a national movement.

Anonymous said...

Reading this blog brought to mind the book "Defying Hitler". The Disaffected Lib's comments express this incident exactly. There is not a doubt, this will continue. Both my parents served during WW II. My mother especially would have a lot to say with regard to this outrage. She was English who lost her father and a brother during the war, while another brother spent all the war in a German consentration camp. Cannot people see the correlation between this incident and Hitler? Anyong

Owen Gray said...

A good question, Anyong. The parallels are pretty clear.

Trailblazer said...

Listening to US right wing radio I find there is huge push to influence school boards across the US.
They really do not like what they call critical race theory which has become battle cry.

Canada problem should not to become caught up with this.
The US has a habit of exporting their ideology ; wrapping it up with other issues.
I believe that Canada's arm was twisted to enter the Afghanistan debacle.

TB


Owen Gray said...

That's always a danger, TB. But we can -- and have -- resisted. Remember SUN News? We decided we didn't need a northern version of FOX News.