Its a culture war thats totally out of control: the authors whose books are being banned in US schools – The Guardian
When the owners of a Tennessee comics shop learned that a local school board had voted to remove Art Spiegelmans Holocaust classic Maus from its curriculum, they sprang into action with an appeal calling for donations to fund free copies for schoolchildren. Within hours, money started pouring in from all over the world. We had donations from Israel, the UK and Canada as well as from the US, says Richard Davis, co-owner of Nirvana Comics.
Ten days later, they closed the appeal, after raising $110,000 (84,000) from 3,500 donors. We bought up all the copies the publisher had in its warehouse and were now in the process of shipping 3,000 copies of Maus to students all over the country, along with a study guide written by a local schoolteacher, says Davis, who has relied on volunteers to help with the distribution.
For Spiegelman, it has meant an exponential sales boost for a 30-year-old book the only graphic novel to win a Pulitzer prize, in 1992 and a flurry of speaking engagements across the country. It just shows, he says, you cant ban books unless youre willing to burn them and you cant burn them all unless youre willing to burn the writers and the readers too.
Thats just as well, adds the 74-year-old cartoonist, because this is the most Orwellian version of society Ive ever lived in. Its not as simple as left v right. Its a culture war thats totally out of control. As a first-amendment fundamentalist, I believe in the right of anyone to read anything, provided they are properly supported. If a kid wants to read Mein Kampf, its better to do it in a library or school environment than to discover it on Daddys shelves and be traumatised.
Unfortunately, there is an unprecedented rise in attempts to remove books from the USs libraries and schools. The American Library Association (ALA) told the Guardian that in the period from 1 September to 30 November, more than 330 unique cases were reported more than double the number for the whole of 2020, and nearing the total for the previous (pre-pandemic) year.
Its definitely getting worse, says Suzanne Nossel, the CEO of the free-speech organisation PEN America, which has led the resistance against book banning for more than a decade. We used to hear about a book challenge or ban a few times a year. Now its every week or every day. We also see proposed legislative bans, as opposed to just school districts taking action. It is part of a concerted effort to try to hold back the consequences of demographic and social change by controlling the narratives available to young people.
Predominantly, the ALA reported, the challenges were targeted at the voices of the marginalised books and resources that mirror the lives of those who are gay, queer or transgender, or that tell the stories of persons who are Black, Indigenous or persons of colour. Or, as Spiegelman says, of his own experience: If I was a transgender Black great-grandchild of slaves, Id be more likely to be banned. This feels like a drive-by shooting.
Maus was removed on the basis of eight swearwords mainly God damn and nudity: a bare-breasted, suicidal mouse representing Spiegelmans mother, who killed herself when he was 20 years old. The ironic thing about it, says the cartoonist, is that he never intended the book for children, but wrote it to work out his own feelings about the parental legacy of the Holocaust. I was a bit offended at first when I learned that it was being used in schools, but, after speaking to young people who had read the books [it was originally published in two volumes], I just had to drop my prejudice and accept they were fine with it.
Many of the challenges centre on a moral hysteria about the protection of children. Theyre playing woke snowflakery back: This might upset people, says Margaret Atwood in an email to me. A graphic novel version of Atwoods The Handmaids Tale was one of the books removed from classroom libraries in a Texas school district in December, along with two other dystopian graphic novel classics: an adaptation of Shirley Jacksons The Lottery, and Alan Moores V for Vendetta.
Texas sensitivities about The Handmaids Tale are not new for Atwood, who directs me to an open letter she wrote in 2006 to a school authority after learning that it had decided to remove the novel because of sexual explicitness and offence to Christians (a decision that was overturned after impassioned representations from students). First, she wrote, the remark: Offensive to Christians amazes me. Nowhere in the book is the regime identified as Christian. As for sexual explicitness, The Handmaids Tale is a lot less interested in sex than is much of the Bible.
Though the current censorship drive in the US is predominantly in Republican states, it has become a tit-for-tat controversy, with conservative commentators quick to point out that the left has its own form in censoring classics such as To Kill a Mockingbird or Huckleberry Finn for their perceived racist content. The only ones banning books are critical race theorists, wrote the Jewish News Syndicate columnist Daniel Greenfield. Erstwhile liberals, who had once vocally championed Huck and Mockingbird and shouted down any effort to keep them out of the classroom, now just as vocally want them out and replaced with Ta-Nehisi Coates and Ibram X Kendi.
Ta-Nehisi Coatess memoir Between the World and Me, written as a letter to his teenage son, was among more than 800 books about social justice identified for removal from Texas schools by a state legislator last year, on the basis that they were liable to make students feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress because of their race or sex. Kendis profile, as director of the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University and the author of three influential books on the history of racism in the US (as well as a childrens book), has made him a lightning rod in the row over critical race theory, which according to the Brookings Institute thinktank has become a new bogeyman for people unwilling to acknowledge our countrys racist history and how it impacts the present.
The relationship between book challenges and attempts to control public debate is particularly obvious in this arena, with Brookings reporting in November that nine states (Idaho, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Arizona, and North Dakota) had already passed legislation against the teaching of critical race theory, with a further 20 either in the process of doing so, or planning to.
We do see increased resort to censoriousness on both the left and the right, says Nossel. On the left, it targets books that some people regard as racially offensive, sometimes because they originate from a different time period, when slurs were used more widely than is acceptable now. But it is the right that has invoked the machinery of government including legislative proposals in dozens of states to enforce these bans and prohibitions. In the hierarchy of infringements of free speech that must be recognised as more severe and alarming.
She adds: There must be room for communities to debate what books and curriculum should be made available to students at various levels of education, and parents deserve a say. But ideologically driven crusades to ban particular narratives and viewpoints infringe upon open discourse in the classroom.
It is not only in Tennessee that an alarmed progressive public has responded by pouring money into the pushback. In February, Markus Dohle, the CEO of the publisher Penguin Random House, said he would personally donate at least $500,000 to PEN America to kickstart a new fund to fight book banning, while PRH itself pledged a further $100,000.
Such high stakes might seem unthinkable in the UK, where censorship technically ended with the abolition of the Lord Chamberlains role as theatre censor in 1968. Banning for swearwords as in the Maus case is a peculiarly US thing, as is banning books for sex, like Judy Blumes Forever was from some US state libraries for a long time, says Julia Eccleshare, the director of the Hay childrens festival. There are two reasons for that. One, the US still has a very active childrens library service, so a collective of easy-to-rouse gatekeepers. Two, the religious right remains very powerful, so fundamentalist Bible teaching is still brought into arguments.
More recently, says Eccleshare, the US has been very much on the front foot in attacking anything that can be interpreted as cultural appropriation or cultural insensitivity. Most tragically, I think, Laura Ingalls Wilders Little House on the Prairie series has fallen from being a national treasure to being shunned, because of the Native Americans being described as frightening.
In the UK, she adds, there are rarely these public bans, with the exception perhaps of the Little Black Sambo books, which were quite publicly removed from library shelves. Back in 2003, the author Anne Fine tried to use her influence as childrens laureate to get Melvin Burgesss young-adult novel Doing It junked by its publisher, on the grounds of obscenity, but only succeeded in increasing its sales.
Plenty of books go out of print because they are no longer politically acceptable, and we do quietly remove books, says Eccleshare. Its usually to do with racism, because we have changed such a lot in how we think. Enid Blytons original Noddy stories vanished years ago, on account of their obvious racism. Similarly, Tintin in the Congo is only available now from very shady booksellers on the web.
The reasons for book banning have fluctuated over history, but fall roughly into three categories: religion, obscenity and political control. In 213BC, the Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang buried 460 scholars alive and burned all the books in his kingdom so he could control how history would remember his reign (his distant successor Xi Jinping blocked the name Winnie-the-Pooh from social media sites after being compared to the tubby bear). The first list of books forbidden in Christianity was issued by the pope in the fifth century. And, in 1749, more than a century before the Obscene Publications Act was introduced in the UK, the writer John Cleland was charged with obscenity for Fanny Hill: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, a pornographic moneyspinner he wrote while languishing in a debtors prison.
DH Lawrences Lady Chatterleys Lover had been available in France and Italy for more than 30 years before it was published in the UK in 1960, whereupon its publisher, Penguin, was prosecuted. After a six-day trial at the Old Bailey, during which the books defenders included the novelist EM Forster and the critic Raymond Williams, the jury found Lady Chatterleys Lover to be not obscene. On the first day it was available, a month later, all 200,000 copies sold.
The Lady Chatterley case also demonstrates the international reach of censorship, with separate obscenity trials in Japan, Australia, Canada, India and the US (where it was exonerated along with Fanny Hill and Henry Millers Tropic of Cancer). But, it is in the political arena that book banning is now most toxic globally, with writers themselves under threat, in some parts of their world, along with their books.
The UK is the refuge for two novelists banned from their homelands, who still write in their languages of origin. Hamid Ismailov won the EBRD literature prize in 2019 with The Devils Dance, the first Uzbek novel to be translated into English. Ismailov fled Uzbekistan in 1992 because of what the authoritarian state described as his unacceptable democratic tendencies and worked for the BBC for 25 years. The Devils Dance was smuggled into the country. Im the most widely published Uzbek, yet nobody can mention any of my books. Nobody can mention my name in any article, review [or] historic piece. Its a total ban of my name, of activity, of books, of existence. Its as if Im nonexistent, he has said.
His most recent novel, Manaschi, offers a unique perspective on the colonisation by stealth of former parts of the Soviet empire by China and also of the complex geopolitical legacy that has led to conflicts such as that playing out in Ukraine. Its a part of post-Soviet history that is unravelling. In the initial aftermath of the USSR breakup, many were surprised by how peacefully it happened lets say in comparison with the breakup of Yugoslavia, he says. But the Soviet Union left lots of knots, like the border issues, diasporas, ethnic minorities, mixed populations that are quite explosive in the framework of ethnic states, which inherited that legacy.
The writer Ma Jian has been in exile from mainland China since 1987, when he published a collection of short stories based on his travels in Tibet, which was immediately banned. Until 2008, he says, his novels were published in Hong Kong, but since then they have only been available in Taiwan. By the time he finished his most recent novel, 2018s China Dream, even the underground bookshops in Hong Kong that had quietly imported his work had been shut down. Every Hong Kong publisher I approached turned China Dream down. They said if they did publish it, theyd lose their jobs, and, anyway, there were no bookshops left in Hong Kong that would dare sell it.
Such international examples offer an ominous clue as to where the censorship surge in the US could lead, says Nossel. In the 20th century, the South African apartheid state banned 12,000 books, at one point commandeering a steel factory furnace in order to burn reviled texts. And, in the 1930s, the Nazi party railed against un-German books, staging book burnings of Jewish, Marxist, pacifist and sexually explicit literature.
Legislation adopted in Hungary last year banned from schools all books referencing homosexuality, in the name of the protection of children. In 2014, Russia passed a law adding Nazi propaganda to the subjects it bans and restricts LGBT content, offences to traditional values, and criticisms of the state are among others, says Nossel. Booksellers were so fearful of running afoul of the broad law that they removed Spiegelmans Maus from stores because of the swastika on the books cover, despite its potent anti-fascist message.
This is a book about memory, said Spiegelman at the time. We dont want cultures to erase memory, because then they just keep doing the same thing again and again.
The symmetry between Russia and the US is striking. As Oscar Wilde once wrote: The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world its own shame.
Read the original post:
Its a culture war thats totally out of control: the authors whose books are being banned in US schools - The Guardian
- Rupert Murdochs family reaches deal on who will control media empire after his death - Toronto Sun - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- Erdogan tightens his control over the media - Atalayar - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Social Media May Be Fueling Negative Reactions To Birth Control Pills, Study Finds - indica News - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Usham backs Media Bill as a tool for lawful information dissemination - Edition.mv - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Big Data Leak in Pakistan: Where Is the Government Control? - The Media Line - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Tim Dillon Was Far From Funny in Joke About Jewish Control of the Media - Algemeiner.com - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Inside the Deal Ending the Murdoch Succession Fight - The New York Times - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- ChamSys Acquires Arkaos MediaMaster, GrandVJ And KlingNet To Deliver Unified Lighting, Pixel Mapping And Media Control Solution - Live Design Online - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Lachlan finally has control of Murdoch empire but deal is a win for sibling rivals - The Guardian - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Lachlan Murdoch is now in control of News Corp and its Australian newspapers are safe for now - The Guardian - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Sri Lanka to expand scope of controversial 1970s media control law - EconomyNext - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Journalists stage protest near Majlis after being ousted from committee reviewing media control bill - raajje.mv - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Murdoch heirs settle dispute over control of the right-wing mogul's media empire - France 24 - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- ChamSys acquires Arkaos MediaMaster to deliver unified lighting, pixel mapping and media control solution - Cinematography World - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Rupert Murdochs family reaches deal on who will control media empire after his death - AP News - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- The Murdoch Succession Fight Is Over. So What Does Lachlan Control? - The New York Times - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Rupert Murdochs family reaches deal on who will control media empire after his death - Inquirer.com - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- The real-life 'Succession' fight for control of the Murdoch media empire has come to an end - MSN - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Rupert Murdochs family reaches deal on who will control media empire after his death - WXXV News 25 - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- The real-life 'Succession' fight for control of the Murdoch media empire has come to an end - Business Insider - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- ChamSys Acquires Arkaos MediaMaster, GrandVJ and KlingNet to Deliver Unified Lighting, Pixel Mapping and Media Control Solution - etnow.com - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Rupert Murdochs family reach deal on who will control media empire after death - STV News - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Murdoch family resolves succession dispute with Lachlan remaining in control of media empire - 9News - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Outrage over 'ghost projects' for flood control lands on Filipino 'nepo babies' flaunting wealth on social media - Mothership - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Serbia: Media freedom groups warn against attempt to seize political control of last remaining independent TV stations N1 and Nova - ipi.media - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Sean Plunket now stands alone on his Platform - The Spinoff - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Maldives: Government faces increasing backlash on media control bill / FIP - International Federation of Journalists - IFJ - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Journalists sound alarm over bill to shackle free media - Raajje.mv - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Pres. denies media control: Not something I'm interested in, nor have I ever done - Raajje.mv - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Media control bill won't silence the people, even if passed: Mariya - Raajje.mv - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Media control bill placed on agenda for parliaments extraordinary sitting tomorrow - Edition.mv - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- National Day, freedom bounds and media control - Maldives Independent - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- How to manage social media notifications and regain control - Kurt the CyberGuy - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- Orban and Fidesz: fifteen years of media control and an anti-Ukrainian strategy News from Fakti.bg - World - fakti.bg - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- Taylor Swift Found a New Way to Control Her Narrative: Podcasts - The New York Times - August 16th, 2025 [August 16th, 2025]
- Influencers criticize birth control and push 'natural' methods. Here's what to know - NPR - August 12th, 2025 [August 12th, 2025]
- $250K Monster Month promotion withdrawn after dispute over social media control - Frequency News - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- Analysis: Information is power, and Trump wants more control over it - CNN - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- How to reassign keyboard keys in Windows 11 - theregister.com - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- Google Maps media control feature missing on Android - VnExpress International - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- Bitfocus Buttons Enterprise Edition Unveiled at IBC2025 with Advanced Features - Digital Studio India - July 10th, 2025 [July 10th, 2025]
- Assembly Launches 'Assembly Control' to Elevate Brand Safety, Suitability, and Campaign Performance in Programmatic Media - Yahoo Finance - July 10th, 2025 [July 10th, 2025]
- Bluesky Gives Users More Control Over their Notifications - Social Media Today - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Spin Control: Media struggles after Trump swears with cameras rolling - The Spokesman-Review - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Beyond banks and brokers: All about decentralized finance (DeFi) - Britannica - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- The Future of Crypto Payroll Security: Bitchat and Decentralized Messaging - OneSafe - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Paradigm leads $11.5 million funding round in Kuru Labs, a decentralized exchange blending CLOBs and AMMs - The Block - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Decentralized Payroll: The Future of Work - OneSafe - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Jack Dorsey tests Bitchat decentralized messaging without internet - Cointelegraph - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- CrossFis Haley Cromer on Bridging Traditional Finance and Web3 for a Decentralized Future - BlockTelegraph - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- India's Crypto Tax: Navigating New Norms with Decentralized Solutions - OneSafe - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Turkey Tightens Its Grip on Crypto: What It Means for Decentralized Exchanges - OneSafe - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Spheron and AIxBlock Unite to Democratize Decentralized AI - CoinTrust - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- The Role of Web3 in Shaping NFT Marketplace Opportunities - Vocal - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- BNB Adds Centralized Features, But Lightchain AI Adds Decentralized Incentives That Drive New Demand - Modern Diplomacy - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Taiko and Nethermind Partner to Enhance Ethereum Rollup Infrastructure - Blockchain News - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- The Rise of Decentralized Stablecoins: Can They Replace Centralized Counterparts in 2025? - Vocal - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- On MSNBC's Deadline: White House, Angelo Carusone highlights how Trump is losing control of narrative dominance due to "fractures" in... - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Assembly Control Transforms Programmatic Advertising with Revolutionary Brand Safety Platform - Stock Titan - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Now, United States Border Control Scrutinizes Social Media: For The Travelers To The United States from France, Spain, and Beyond, Here Is All You... - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Assembly Launches 'Assembly Control' to Elevate Brand Safety, Suitability, and Campaign Performance in Programmatic Media - Macau Business - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Breaking the Studio Social Media Blackout: Caylee Cowan Takes Creative Control and Financial Freedom with Fanfix - Silicon UK - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Aleema's control over PTI social media makes her all-powerful within Imran-founded party - Geo News - June 26th, 2025 [June 26th, 2025]
- Tuenti social media co-founder takes control of Puerto Bans bullring with plans to demolish it - Sur in English - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- InMobi Advertising Unveils Mobile-First Curation Platform Empowering All Media Buyers with Precision, Transparency, and Control - Passionate In... - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Trump takes control of media cycle with travel ban, Harvard visa restriction, Biden investigation policy spree - Washington Examiner - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Pushed Out and Unfiltered: Joy Reid, Misogynoir, Media Control,and the Fear of a Black Womans Voice - Daily Kos - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- GitGuardian urges shift to machine identity control - SC Media - May 11th, 2025 [May 11th, 2025]
- Opinion: Its time to lose control - Main Street Media of Tennessee - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Opinion | How a Professional Bully Is Winning Control of the Media - Common Dreams - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Social Media, Social Control, and the Politics of Public Shaming - - Political Science Now - April 21st, 2025 [April 21st, 2025]
- Tariff saga creates a meme war on social media, making it difficult for brands to 'control the message' - Digiday - April 21st, 2025 [April 21st, 2025]
- Conservatives are limiting media access to Poilievre. Is it helping or hurting him? - CBC - April 12th, 2025 [April 12th, 2025]
- Robert W. McChesney, who warned of corporate media control, dies at 72 - Editor and Publisher - April 10th, 2025 [April 10th, 2025]
- FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez Sounds Alarm Over Trump Administrations Absolute Pattern of Censorship and Control - Variety - April 10th, 2025 [April 10th, 2025]
- 'Attack lined up': Grenon says he offered compromise but believes NZME board has 'no interest' - NZ Herald - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- Russia seeks full control of partially occupied Ukrainian regions in talks with US, media reports - Kyiv Independent - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Navigating the digital world without letting it control you. - Psychology Today - March 25th, 2025 [March 25th, 2025]
- ANZ Digital Padlock to give customers real-time control in fight against fraud and scams - ANZ - March 25th, 2025 [March 25th, 2025]
- Trump Handpicking Reporters and Bezos Partisan Shift: A Trend in Media Control - MSN - March 13th, 2025 [March 13th, 2025]