Showing posts with label Banned Books Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Banned Books Week. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2020

Banned Books Week 2020

 

It's Banned Books Week! 

Check out these commonly banned books. 



 In 2019, And Tango makes three was one of the most challenged books that year. Check it out in the Curriculum section of the Dick Smith Library, call number PZ10.1 .R414 TAN 2005


Title details for The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander - Available This book was banned by the Florida Department of Correction and North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Check out the e-book of OverDrive.

Title details for Beyond Magenta by Susan Kuklin - Available Commonly banned and contested for LGBTQIA+ content and for sexually explicit content. Available on OverDrive. 

Title details for The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood - Available Now a popular T.V. series, this book is often banned due to sexual references and profanity. Available to read on OverDrive. 

Book Jacket Even graphic novels get banned. Available in the Curriculum section of the Dick Smith Library, call number PZ7.7 .T355 THI 2014

Monday, September 23, 2019

Read the BANNED book before you watch the series!



For Banned Books Week, check out these three books that have been turned into a hit series. 






1. C
atch-22 by Joseph Heller
Catch-22 is about Yossarian, a pilot during WWII, who is being sent on missions that only a crazy person would agree to. The catch? If you know you’re crazy, you can’t really be crazy, so he’s off on another impossible mission.  Find it on the shelves in print, audio or as an e-book, call # PS3558 .E476 C3385.



     











   2. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood 
     Offred navigates the dangerous life of being a “handmaiden”, forced to live a life of servitude while humanity struggles to deal with crippling levels of infertility. Tired of being oppressed, Offred dares to resist even if it means her life and the lives of those she trusts.  Find it on OverDrive, or on the shelves at call # PR9199.3 .A8 H3. 












      3. His Dark Materials  by Phillip Pullman 
     This exhilarating three part series features Lyra and Will, two children trying to out run child-stealing Gobblers and soul-eating Specters. Together they stumble upon an unthinkable weapon, terrifying secrets, and facedown a seemingly impossible task. Find it on OverDrive, or as an ebook, call #PZ7 .P968 G444.


Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Banned Books Week: Five of Top Ten Most Challenged Books of 2016

Every year, the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) compiles a list of the Top Ten Most Challenged Books in libraries and schools. The lists are based on information from media stories and voluntary challenge reports sent to OIF from communities across the United States. Surveys indicate that 82% to 97% of book challenges are not reported and receive no media coverage. Thus the Top Ten Most Challenged Books list should not be viewed as an exhaustive report.  In 2016, the OIF recorded 323 challenges.  Out of that Top Ten list, our library owns four and will acquire a fifth:

Number 10 on the list is Eleanor & Park, written by Rainbow Rowell. One of seven New York Times Notable Children’s Books and a 2014 Honor Book recipient of the Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature, this  novel was challenged for offensive language. It can be found in our OverDrive e-book collection.
Number 6 on the list is Looking for Alaska by John Green. This 2006 Printz Award winner is a young adult novel that was challenged and restricted for a sexually explicit scene that may lead a student to “sexual experimentation.”  This book was the number 1 most challenged book in 2015, and number 7 in both 2012 and 2013, for reasons including offensive language and the inclusion of drugs/alcohol/smoking, as well as being sexually explicit and unsuited for age group. It can be found on the lower level of the Dick Smith Library, Curriculum Collection, call number EDUC PZ7 .G8233 LO 2005, and also in our OverDrive e-book collection.
Number 4 on the 2016 list is I Am Jazz, by Jessica Herthel and Jazz Jennings, illustrated by Shelagh McNicholas. This picture book memoir was challenged and removed because it portrays a transgender child and because of language, sex education, and offensive viewpoints. It was also number 3 on the 2015 list for teh following reasons: inaccurate, homosexuality, sex education, religious viewpoint, and unsuited for age group.  It can be found on the lower level of the Dick Smith Library in the Curriculum Collection, call number EDUC HQ77.7 .H467 2014.

Number 2 on the 2016 list is Drama, written and illustrated by Raina Telgemeier. This 2013 Stonewall Book Award Honor-winning graphic novel for young adults was challenged because it includes LGBT characters, was deemed sexually explicit, and was considered to have an offensive political viewpoint. This book will be acquired for our library.  Drama was also number 10 on the list in 2014.
The most challenged book of 2016 is This One Summer by Mariko Tamaki, illustrated by Jillian Tamaki. This young adult graphic novel was named both a 2015 Printz Honor Book and a 2015 Randolph Caldecott Award Honor Book, the latter designation for its illustrations. It was restricted, relocated, and banned due to LGBT characters, drug use, profanity, sexual explicitity with mature themes. It can be found on the Dick Smith Library lower level in the Curriculum Collection, call number EDUC PZ7.7 .T355 THI 2014.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Book Banning Attempt in Hood County in 2015

In the spring and summer of 2015, the Hood County Library (in nearby Granbury) was the focus of a challenge to two books.  Given that this (September 25 through October 1, 2016) is Banned Books Week, it's a relevant topic.

The two books, about acceptance and tolerance, were My Princess Boy and This Day in June.

My  Princess Boy, written by Cheryl Kilodavis, is subtitled "a mom's story about a young boy who loves to dress up" -- in this case, her four-year-old son.  The narrative is a bit pedantic, but there's an important message about compassion and tolerance. Suzanne DeSimone's illustrations are notable for the lack of features on the faces.  That might be so the reader or listener can imagine anyone's and everyone's faces on the characters - further promoting acceptance of others and one's own uniqueness.


This Day in June, written by Gayle E. Pitman, Ph.D., a professor of psychology, won the 2015 Stonewall Book Award - Mike Morgan & Larry Romans Children’s & Young Adult Literature Award, given annually to "English-language works of exceptional merit for children or teens relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender experience.'  This was the first time in the award's 44-year-history that a picture book won (or was even named an honor book).


The book portrays the sights, sounds, and emotions of a colorful gay pride parade with short rhyming text and intricate illustrations by Kristyna Litten.  Young children who look at this book will see a fun parade; older children and parents will see some of the subtler messages in the shirts and signs of parade participants and watchers (the latter generally rendered in simple outlines and pastels).

Pitman also included an interesting four-page reading guide that provides more background for the images in each of the double-page-spread illustrations, as well as a four-page "note to parents and caregivers" with ideas on using the book and talking to children of various ages about the issues it might bring up.

More than 50 people submitted challenges to the books to the Hood County Library in late May and early June, 2015.  The county's Library Advisory Board (whose members are appointed by the elected county judge and commissioners) held a public hearing to consider the book removal requests on June 8.

The board voted unanimously to recommend keeping the books. The library director, in an attempt to compromise with the complainants, moved This Day in June to the library’s adult collection, because of its reading guide.

Nevertheless, the complainants continued to voice their disapproval, so the Commissioners Court held a public hearing on July 15, 2015.  The meeting lasted nearly three hours and drew both supporters and opponents of the books, who were all allowed to speak for up to five minutes each.  About three fourths of those who spoke supported keeping the books.

Commissioners decided not to vote on the issue after the county attorney spoke.   She noted the courts would likely consider any attempts to remove, relocate, or restrict access to the books to be unlawful censorship, based on previous case law involving another Texas public library.

The decision not to vote meant the books will stay where they are.  Not surprisingly, this issue led to a review of all the library's policies (including collection development), but ultimately no major changes were made to those.

This is an example of a book challenge that did NOT result in a ban.  "Banned Books Week" is somewhat of a misnomer - but "Challenged Books Week" does not have quite the same ring to it.  Luckily, most books that are challenged in libraries and schools are not banned.

Libraries - especially public and academic libraries - should support the freedom to read.  Individuals (including parents for their young children) still have the right to choose what they read - just not to restrict the rights of others through censorship.


[My Princess Boy and This Day in June are available on the lower level of the Dick Smith Library in the Curriculum Collection, call numbers EDUC HQ1075 .K535 2010 and EDUC PZ8.3 .P5586836 TH 2014 respectively.]

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Banned Books Week! *Sept 25th-Oct.1st


Banned books week is coming up. It is Sept. 25th-Oct. 1st. The purpose of banned books week is the celebration of the freedom to read. Each year a different category is chosen to highlight those books related to that topic. This years focus is on "Diversity". Topics of diversity include the following:




  • Non-White main and/or secondary characters
  • LGBT main and/or secondary characters
  • Disabled main and/or secondary characters
  • Issues about race or racism
  • LGBT issues
  • Issues about religion, which encompass in this situation the Holocaust and terrorism
  • Issues about disability and/or mental illness
  • Non-Western settings, in which the West is North America and Europe

  • One of the things the Dick Smith Library is doing this year to celebrate banned books week is by creating an interactive display. We will have carts of books located on each level that will be wrapped in brown paper, as the example below.


     Students will be able to read a brief description of the book and the reason why it was banned. If they are interested in the book, they will need to check out the book in order to unwrap it to find out the title.


                                               What would you guess is the title to this book?
                                                   Hint: "After all, tomorrow is another day."

    So, while are you are in here studying next week, take a break to check out some of the banned books we have to offer!
    "Censorship is the child of fear and the father of ignorance."  -Laurie Halse Anderson



    Sources: http://www.diversityinya.com/2014/09/book-challenges-suppress-diversity/

    Monday, September 28, 2015

    Banned Books Week 2015

    Help the library celebrate Banned Books Week, 
    September 28th-October 2nd!
    The library's Banned Books Week theme this year highlights characters from frequently banned or challenged books.
     Hester Prynne from the Scarlet Letter is featured here. 

    Stop by the library and pick up a Banned Books Week button!

    Learn more about Banned Books Week by checking out our displays on all floors of the library. 

    See a book you'd like to read? Check out the book with your student ID card. 

    Have questions about Banned Books Week?
    Contact us at (254)968-9249 or email reference@tarleton.edu 

    Wednesday, September 24, 2014

    2014 Banned Books Week: Most Challenged Books in Texas Schools

    Since 2002, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas has posted an annual report, Free People Read Freely, during Banned Books Week that provides information about challenged books that have been removed, restricted, or retained in Texas public and charter school libraries and class reading lists during the previous school year. This information is obtained through an Open Records request by the ACLU under the Texas Public Information Act.

    Here, in no particular order, are the eight children's books on the lower level of the Dick Smith Library that were challenged (elsewhere!) in 2013-2014.  Click on the titles to get the call numbers and more information about the books:

    1. It’s Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris
    Reason Cited: Inappropriate for grade level (a middle school)
    Action Taken: Retained (no restrictions)

    2. Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz
    Reason Cited: Politically, socially, or racial offensive (parent felt book promoted illegal immigration and was not age appropriate)
    Action Taken: Retained (no restrictions) - 5th/6th grade

    3. Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
    Reason Cited: Sexual content
    Action Taken: Retained (no restrictions) - intermediate school

    4. Lovingly Alice by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
    Reason Cited: Sexual content or nudity
    Action Taken: Use restricted (book was moved from elementary to secondary campus)

    A Bad Kitty Christmas by Nick Bruel
    Reason Cited: Promotes homosexual/lesbian couples
    Action Taken: Banned from a PreK-8 charter school

    6. The Giver by Lois Lowry
    Reason Cited: Offensive to religious sensitivities
    Action Taken: Alternate book allowed (curriculum only)

    7. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
    Reason Cited: Parent did not want the student reading about ghosts
    Action Taken: Alternate assignment was provided for the student

    8. Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
    Reason Cited: Politically, racially, or socially offensive
    Action Taken: Retained (no restrictions) in a high school

    Tuesday, September 23, 2014

    Banned Books Week September 22-26

    This week is Banned Books Week!  This year's theme is banned comic books.
    Help us celebrate!




    We have 3 "Caught Reading Banned Books" mug shot photo areas set up:
    Main level by copy/print area,
    Upper level by copy/print area, and
    Lower level by Special Collections Suite.
    Anyone can also sit at the bar when entering the library for the
    Comic Book Cover photo op.
    Don't forget to pick up a "Banned Books Week" button
    available in various locations around the library.

    Tuesday, September 24, 2013

    BUTTONS! My buttons! Banned Books Week 2013

    At Tarleton Libraries we have a tradition of buttons. That's right, BUTTONS! We like to hand them out during special events like Library Lovers Day and Banned Books Week. This year is no exception. Yesterday began Banned Books Week 2013. Tarleton Libraries' theme this year is "I'm with the BANNED". Take the time to look over our Banned Books Week table display in the lobby, grab a free button, and checkout a banned book. You may be surprised at some of the books that have been banned/challenged.


    Not sure what Banned Books Week is? Check out the American Library Association Website for more details. Feel free to email reference@tarleton.edu or call (254)9689249 with questions.

    Tweet us your favorite banned book
     @tarletonlib #BannedBooksWeek

    Monday, September 23, 2013

    Celebrate Banned Books Week


    Starting today, Tarleton Libraries are celebrating Banned Books Week
    September 22-28th. 

    Wondering how you can celebrate your freedom to read this week? 
    Check out a banned book and read to find out why it was banned. 

     Not sure which books are banned? 

    Take a look at one of our newest social media accounts to find the answer:


    We're on Pinterest; check us out this week! 


    The library is on Pinterest, and we have a "Challenged Books" pin board. Our staff has been pinning examples of banned books so you can check them out. 

    We also post other information, such as Tarleton History and Traditions, Library/Campus Events, Featured Resources, Art/Writing done by Tarleton Faculty, Staff, or Students, and much more. 

    Follow Us!

    If you have any questions concerning Banned Books Week or any other question, 
    please feel free to contact us:

    (254)968-9249 or reference@tarleton.edu 


    Wednesday, October 3, 2012

    Book Challenge Statistics

    The American Library Association has an interesting page of library material challenge statistics.

    Some highlights:
    • From 1990-2010, the top three reasons library materials were challenged included sexual explicitness, offensive language, and being considered unsuited to age group.
    • Parents are by far the most likely people to initiate a challenge.
    • Most book challenges happen at schools and school libraries.
    Take a look around the site - there's lots of other good information, including an explanation of the difference between a challenge and a banning, lists of banned and challenged books, most frequently challenged authors, and more.

    Friday, September 30, 2011

    Banned Books Week

    The Dick Smith Library's 2011 "Banned Books Week" Display
    This is "Banned Books Week" in the United States, September 24 through October 1.  It really should be called "Challenged Books Week," because not that many books are actually banned.  Many books are challenged in schools and libraries in the United States each year. A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, while a banning reflects the actual removal of those materials. The American Library Association (ALA) tracks challenges that occur, recording 348 challenges in 2010 (the fewest since 1990).  However, the ALA estimates that this number reflects only 20-25% of actual challenges, as many are not reported.

    You might want to check out this interesting infographic about the top ten challenged books of 2010, or join the Banned Books Week Virtual Read-Out on YouTube.

    [photo above and the others at the link on the caption by Tracy Holtman; the display was put together by Rashelle Hansen and Sharon Alexander.]

    Friday, October 15, 2010

    Life Without the Library

    Due to numerous requests, I decided to add a link to a post on the "Life Without the Library" comic series. The link had gotten lost, and it has taken me a while to find it again, although now I have it bookmarked. And now it is available to anyone who is searching for it. The link is as follows: http://www.tarleton.edu/library/images/LibraryComics.jpg. Thanks once again to all who helped me create it. I honestly could not have done it without you.

    Tuesday, September 28, 2010

    Top Ten Tuesday: Most Challenged Books in Texas

    Since 2002, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas has posted an annual report, Free People Read Freely, during Banned Books Week that provides information about challenged books that have been removed, restricted, or retained in Texas public and charter school libraries and class reading lists during the previous school year. This information is obtained through an Open Records request by the ACLU under the Texas Public Information Act.

    Here are the twelve (there was a four-way tie for ninth place) books (or series of books) on the lower level of the Dick Smith Library that were challenged most frequently:

    1.  Harry Potter series, by J. K. Rowling - the first book, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, was challenged 21 times just in 2001-2002!

    2.  Forever by Judy Blume (who is a panelist in a webinar today on challenged books) - 11 challenges since 2001, including one this past school year.

    3. (three-way tie with seven challenges each):  The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier, In the Night Kitchenby Maurice Sendak, and Olive's Ocean by Kevin Henkes.

    6.  (three-way tie with five challenges each):  And Tango Makes Three by Justin Richardson, It's Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris, and the Scary Stories series (such as Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark) by Alvin Schwartz.

    9.  (four-way tie with four challenges each):  The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman (all in 2007-2008 when the movie came out), Go Ask Alice by Anonymous, It's Not the End of the World by Judy Blume, and Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor.

    Monday, September 27, 2010

    Free Banned Books Webinar Tuesday 1-2 PM Library Multipurpose Room

    Defending the Right to Read: 
    Celebrating Banned Books Week

    Tuesday, September 28, 2010 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
    - Dick Smith Library Multipurpose Room

    We face more challenges than ever when it comes to defending children's right to read. In celebration of Banned Books Week, this webinar features a stellar panel of experts, including renowned author and longtime advocate of intellectual freedom Judy Blume, who will discuss book rating systems, the impact of the Internet on challenges, the effect of censorship on children’s publishing, and how to best prepare for book challenges.

    Additional speakers include Beverly Horowitz, Vice President and Publisher of Delacorte Press Books for Young Readers; Pat Scales, former school librarian and a member of the National Coalition against Censorship Council of Advisors; Kristin Pekoll, a young-adult librarian at the West Bend (WI) Community Memorial Library; and Nanette Perez, program officer at the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom.

    Friday, September 24, 2010

    Banned Books Week Starts Saturday!

    Banned Books Week was conceived by the American Library Association as an annual celebration of our First Amendment rights and our freedom as Americans to read whatever we want. During the last week of September, libraries all over the nation host displays and discussions that promote the idea of intellectual freedom.

    The Dick Smith Library is proud to participate in Banned Books Week, and will feature a book display highlighting materials that have been challenged for one reason or another. All of them have been the target of proposed banning, relocation, or other challenges at a library in the United States.

    Featured titles include:
    Twilight saga by Stephenie Meyer
    Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling
    To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    ...and many more!

    For more information regarding Banned Books Week, check out http://www.ala.org/bbooks

    Tuesday, September 29, 2009

    Ten Top Tuesday – 10 most challenged books of 2008

    September 26 - October 3, 2009

    Its banned book week and it is Tuesday, time for a list. ALA lists these as the top ten most frequently challenged books of 2008. Many of these are in the Dick Smith Library! Take a look.
    1. And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell
      Reasons: anti-ethnic, anti-family, homosexuality, religious viewpoint, and unsuited to age group
    2. His Dark Materials trilogy, by Philip Pullman
      Reasons: political viewpoint, religious viewpoint, and violence
    3. TTYL; TTFN; L8R, G8R (series), by Lauren Myracle
      Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, and unsuited to age group
    4. Scary Stories
      (series), by Alvin Schwartz
      Reasons: occult/satanism, religious viewpoint, and violence
    5. Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya
      Reasons: occult/satanism, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, and violence
    6. The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
      Reasons: drugs, homosexuality, nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit, suicide, and unsuited to age group
    7. Gossip Girl (series), by Cecily von Ziegesar
      Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, and unsuited to age group
    8. Uncle Bobby's Wedding, by Sarah S. Brannen
      Reasons: homosexuality and unsuited to age group
    9. The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini
      Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, and unsuited to age group
    10. Flashcards of My Life, by Charise Mericle Harper
      Reasons: sexually explicit and unsuited to age group

    Here is some good information about how the list of most challenged books is determined.


    Saturday, September 19, 2009

    Book Challenges

    "Banned Books" week is coming up, September 26 through October 3. Many books are challenged in schools and libraries in the United States each year. A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, while a banning reflects the actual removal of those materials. The American Library Association (ALA) tracks challenges that occur, recording 513 challenges in 2008. However, many challenges are not reported, and the ALA estimates that this reflects only 20-25% of actual challenges.

    This Google Maps mashup of Book Bans and Challenges, 2007-2009, is drawn from cases documented by ALA and the Kids' Right to Read Project, a collaboration of the National Coalition Against Censorship and the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression. Details are available in ALA's "Books Banned and Challenged 2007-2008," and "Books Banned and Challenged 2008-2009," and the "Kids' Right to Read Project Report." Click on a pinpoint for additional information on the location of the challenge and details on what happened.

    View Book Bans and Challenges, 2007-2009 in a larger map

    Note that the map above doesn't include all the challenges that have occurred in Texas. For 13 years now, the ACLU of Texas has released an annual report, Free People Read Freely, during Banned Books Week that provides information about the books that have been removed, restricted, or retained in Texas school libraries and class reading lists during the previous school year. This information is obtained through an Open Records request by the ACLU under the Texas Public Information Act.

    Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    Top Ten Tuesday – Freedom to Read

    It is Tuesday again – How about a list? In the United State we observe Banned Books Week and in Canada they honor Freedom to Read. Both are such GREAT ideas. We should celebrate all our freedoms! This week (February 22-28, 2008) the Canadian Freedom of Expression Committee is celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Freedom to Read campaign. Here are 10 ways you can celebrate your Freedom to Read!

    • Stay informed. If you read or hear about a challenge, support both your librarian and free and open access to library materials.
    • Exercise your rights! Check out or re-read a favorite banned book
    • Get involved. Volunteer to help your library.
    • Hold a discussion about the freedom to read and helps educate others about censorship.
    • Speak out. Write letters to the editor, congressman, etc. supporting the freedom to read.
    • Talk to your neighbors and friends about why everyone should be allowed to choose for themselves and their families what they read.
    • Encourage your book group to read and discuss a book, any book – you are free to choose!
    • Give one of your favorite books as a gift.
    • Share Your Experience - let others us know your Freedom to Read and why you celebrate it!
    • Join the Freedom to Read Foundation. The Foundation is dedicated to the legal and financial defense of intellectual freedom, especially in libraries.

    Freedom to Read Week 2009