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Books Censorship

Ironic Effect of Efforts to Ban Books: Teenagers Form New Book Clubs to Read Them (cnn.com) 260

CNN reports on "an ironic effect" of efforts to remove books from libraries in America. "The more certain books are singled out, the more people want to read them."

And for some U.S. teenagers, "banned book clubs, recent book banning attempts have been a springboard for wider discussions around censorship." The Banned Book Club at Firefly Bookstore [started by 8th grader Joslyn Diffenbaugh] read George Orwell's "Animal Farm" as its first pick. While the satirical novella, which makes a pointed critique of totalitarianism, isn't one of the books currently being challenged in the US, it was banned in the Soviet Union until its fall and was rejected for publication in the UK during its wartime alliance with the USSR. And it faced challenges in Florida in the '80s for being "pro-communist." That history made for some thought-provoking conversations. "It taught a lot because it had references to different forms of government that maybe some adults didn't like their kids reading about, even though it was run by pigs," Diffenbaugh said. "I really thought it shouldn't have been banned for those reasons, or at all."

Teenagers at the Common Ground Teen Center in Washington, Pennsylvania, formed a banned book club soon after a Tennessee school district voted to remove "Maus" from an eighth grade curriculum. But while the graphic novel about the Holocaust was the catalyst for the club, says director Mary Jo Podgurski, the first title they chose to read was, fittingly, "Fahrenheit 451" — the 1953 dystopian novel about government censorship that itself has been challenged over the years. "Obviously this whole idea of taking away books that they wanted to read or that they thought they should read sparked a nerve in them," said Podgurski, an educator and counselor who oversees the Common Ground Teen Center....

Since reading "Fahrenheit 451," the club has also discussed "Animal Farm" and "1984," which has been challenged for its political themes and sexual content. So far, the young readers at the Common Ground Teen Center have been puzzled as to why those books were once deemed inappropriate. "I often wonder, do adults understand what kids have in their phones?" Podgurski said. "They have access to everything. Saying 'don't read this book' shows that you're not understanding teen culture. Young people have access to much information. What they need is an adult to help them process it."

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Ironic Effect of Efforts to Ban Books: Teenagers Form New Book Clubs to Read Them

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  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Sunday April 17, 2022 @05:21PM (#62454988)
    I remember when they forced music albums to have stickers warning that it had explicit lyrics to "protect the children". The plan was that parents would know which albums not to buy their children. The reality was that it told children which albums to buy or loan from their friends whose parents did not care.
  • by mapkinase ( 958129 ) on Sunday April 17, 2022 @05:22PM (#62454990) Homepage Journal

    the goal of banning is reducing fraction of people who will read the book.

    For every non-conformist book club of 10 people you report there is a disappearance of 1000 people who would have read the uncensored book

    Media, as usual, focuses on 1% of population because it's interesting and entertaining for people.

    I am all for quality entertainment, but do not let the light reading cloud your judgment about reality.

    • the goal of banning is reducing fraction of people who will read the book.

      For every non-conformist book club of 10 people you report there is a disappearance of 1000 people who would have read the uncensored book

      Media, as usual, focuses on 1% of population because it's interesting and entertaining for people.

      I am all for quality entertainment, but do not let the light reading cloud your judgment about reality.

      Do you have actual data showing this? I know when Texas banned a book on the Alamo it actually made me aware of the book and I ended up purchasing it. I never would have done so if it weren't for the effort to ban it. My story is also anecdotal, but I'm curious if you have anything to backup your statement.

      • Was that "Forget the Alamo"? What did you think of it? I've been meaning to give it a read.
        • It was really interesting. I knew little about the history of the Alamo so it was pretty eye-opening.
        • Interesting that Amazon's next recommendation after Forget the Alamo is "The Blood of Heroes: The 13-Day Struggle for the Alamo--and the Sacrifice That Forged a Nation". Looks like Blut und Boden literature is popular in the US as well as its original country.
      • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday April 17, 2022 @08:25PM (#62455342)

        the goal of banning is reducing fraction of people who will read the book.

        For every non-conformist book club of 10 people you report there is a disappearance of 1000 people who would have read the uncensored book

        Media, as usual, focuses on 1% of population because it's interesting and entertaining for people.

        I am all for quality entertainment, but do not let the light reading cloud your judgment about reality.

        Do you have actual data showing this? I know when Texas banned a book on the Alamo it actually made me aware of the book and I ended up purchasing it. I never would have done so if it weren't for the effort to ban it. My story is also anecdotal, but I'm curious if you have anything to backup your statement.

        It was well known that the Catholic church banning books was an impetus for Catholics to buy and read the books. It was a secret all over town.

        Did Texas ban sales of the offending book for the entire state, or just schools? I'm assuming just school.

        Anyhow, the abysmally braindead idea of banning books, especially for school kids, always backfires in the end.

        I grew up in a town that had some pretty strict rules. Nothing could be taught that had any reference to evolution, or even the actual age of the earth. Sex education was 1 day of being told that if you had sex, you would get VD and probably die. I'm not kidding.

        Then college happened. I discovered the world of reality not tainted by religion. I eventually decided a god who demanded lies and couldn't withstand reality, and demanded that procreation was inherently evil - was no god at all, just a prop for people who wanted to control others.

        There were similar issues when a few of the creationist states attempted to eliminate evolution from their dogma of allowable teaching quite a few years back to institute a welding of church and state. So Texas and all the other states that are too weak to have anything but their own doctrine are just igniting curiosity in the intelligent.

        The books will be read, and the people reading them will quickly understand that banning was the result of weakness trying to perpetuate weakness.

        • Many publishers advertise the bans.

          Monty Python's "Life of Brian" was advertised as "So funny it was banned in Norway."

          In America, "Banned in Boston" was often displayed in advertising to show that a film or play was edgy and cool. Often, some gratuitous nudity or profanity would be written into the script just to ensure a ban.

          Banned in Boston [wikipedia.org]

          • Monty Python's "Life of Brian" was advertised as "So funny it was banned in Norway."

            It was banned in one seaside Welsh town until 2009.

          • "A Clockwork Orange" was banned in the UK for many years. It would probably be banned again if they found out that the soundtrack was created by a transgender woman.
        • Decades ago, a DC regional newspaper published a compendium of recorded telephone information services. One was a Catholic service that listed condemned films and TV shows for the week. I would call it to see if any movie sounded like something that I might be able to trick parents into taking me to see, or likely to appear in the Sex in Cinema section of one of the community copies of Playboy.
      • by crtreece ( 59298 ) on Monday April 18, 2022 @09:15AM (#62456440) Homepage
        +1 for "Forget the Alamo".

        In Texas public schools, 7th grade includes a Texas history class. It's the definition of the winners getting to write history. As one example, the class teaches that the revolution was a reaction to authoritarian rule by Santa Anna. They leave out all the parts where Mexico had made slavery illegal and wanted to enforce that in Texas, while the Texians just want to keep their slaves because that was the only way most of their farming enterprises would be economically feasible. Texians raged against the Mexicans taking their "property", aka slaves. After the revolution, their new constitution enshrined the institution of slavery. This is yet another reason current Texans and southerners in general want schools to teach their whitwashed versions of history, not the real thing.

    • I disagree

      Knowledge longs to be known
      Just as chaos longs to become order
      It's intrinsic to to the nature of organics to organize and learn.
      • > Just as chaos longs to become order

        Well nicely worded and all by I'm afraid Mr Entropy disagrees as does Mr Anthropomorphism.
    • Please mod parent up. Yes, book bans cause a bit of a stir & a backlash & then things settle down into mundane routine where hundreds or thousands of books just aren't talked about anymore. My schools introduced me to some radical ideas that made me reconsider my beliefs & attitudes (the classic "liberal arts education"). If book bans go ahead, this divergent thinking will be lost & we'll have generations of narrow-minded, "averse to change", sheep running our economies & political syste
  • the point is to give their voter base something that feels like a win while they're busy shipping their jobs overseas, cutting their pay and letting mega corps price gouge them.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      So the Democrats are shipping Americans' jobs overseas? Those nice corporations are somehow run by Democrats who we've been told do not believe in free enterprise. So how can they successfully run corporations that somehow do well enough to have jobs that can be shipped overseas?

      Anyhow, last we heard from the Dems, airheads like Bernie and Warren wanted to tax the hell out of corporations.

  • by Vegan Cyclist ( 1650427 ) on Sunday April 17, 2022 @06:13PM (#62455094) Homepage

    There's one book that's often overlooked by the book banning bananas - there's all sorts of weird stuff about sex, tons of violence and supernatural insanity including this zombie guy who comes back from the dead - they really need to look into this book called 'The Bible', I'd fully support banning that one!

    • It may be surprising to you, but if you ever do give the bible a read, you'll discover it's actually not that graphic about sex, violence, or the supernatural. You can actually cover topics without being graphic or prurient.

      Watch "Three's Company" again when you get a chance - they're awfully risque, but they're not graphic...well, besides suzanne sommer's high beams.

      • Genesis 19:33-36
        And they made their father drink wine that night: and the firstborn went in, and lay with her father; and he perceived not when she lay down, nor when she arose. And it came to pass on the morrow, that the firstborn said unto the younger, Behold, I lay yesternight with my father: let us make him drink wine this night also; and go thou in, and lie with him, that we may preserve seed of our father. And they made their father drink wine that night also: and the younger arose, and lay with him;

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          Really? You consider that explicit? :)

          I mean, okay, trying to explain killing people and taking off foreskins is going to take some tact, but nothing in those verses comes close to any sort of explicit sexual content.

          Have you ever read Anne Rice? The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty? Or maybe Fifty Shades of Gray?

          If anything in the bible strikes you as explicit, you're missing out on a whole world of kink out there :)

      • It may be surprising to you, but if you ever do give the bible a read, you'll discover it's actually not that graphic about sex, violence, or the supernatural. You can actually cover topics without being graphic or prurient.

        Watch "Three's Company" again when you get a chance - they're awfully risque, but they're not graphic...well, besides suzanne sommer's high beams.

        Allow me - Genesis 19

        5 And they called unto Lot, and said unto him, Where are the men which came in to thee this night? bring them out unto us, that we may know them.

        6 And Lot went out at the door unto them, and shut the door after him,

        7 And said, I pray you, brethren, do not so wickedly.

        8 Behold now, I have two daughters which have not known man; let me, I pray you, bring them out unto you, and do ye to them as is good in your eyes: only unto these men do nothing; for therefore came they under the sh

        • Also, who would name their kids after places in Utah?
        • You'll note the entire story of Lot and his daughters isn't explicit - you have to make a "modern translation" to get it there.

          It's not that there's no sex in the bible, it's that there's no explicit sex. There's no "and then Lot's daughter took her mouth, put it on his shaft, stroked his testicles and licked his cock until it stood hard and straight". It's "she lay". That's about as tame as you can get.

          The problem here is whether or not government employees should be able to discuss explicit sex with el

    • I suppose you'll be happy to learn that under the definition of 'banning' here, the bible is banned in every public school curriculum in the country. And teachers are explicitly forbidden by the courts from introducing the ideas of its contents to students as fundamental truths.

      Since you got what you want, what I want is for this to be extended to all ideologies demanding exclusive adherence to their internal worldviews. Because seems like as we've secularized we've opened a backdoor that allows essentiall

    • Maybe you haven't read the Bible? Here's an interesting nugget someone recently shared with me: everyone in the Bible who is polygamous has a helluva time with it. I mean it really messes up their home life and their relationships. Even the patriarchs and King David get messed up by it. All the happy marriages are faithful. It seems as though God was revealing truth gradually, like you would with children: you're not ready for the whole truth yet, but it doesn't change how you're wired and the consequences
  • I completely approve, but I hope they're not too disappointed by Catcher in the Rye. That book just sucks. Hated it even as an overdramatic teen, still hate it as an adult.

  • I looked through the books on the Banned Books Book Club [bannedbooksbookclub.com] referenced in the article and it appears to me that the club is completely one-sided, towards the left. Don't get me wrong, I'm a leftie myself, but I didn't see Huck Finn and To Kill a Mockingbird on the list, and I know those books have been banned in many schools. So this is not really about banned books, but more about virtue signaling and indoctrinating kids. Move on.
  • Ethan Frome, The Scarlet Letter, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, The Awakening, A Farewell to Arms, ... there's a lot of trash in classic literature. Most of it is so-called "American Literature". Which tends to cover a period of American history where people liked really god-awful stories.

  • But anyone that wants to ban 1984, Animal Farm or Fahrenheit 451 either hasnâ(TM)t read them or didn't understand them. Given what I've seen of Ted Cruz and Tucker Carlson and others of that ilk, either is very probable.

  • by redelm ( 54142 ) on Sunday April 17, 2022 @09:27PM (#62455436) Homepage
    Never heard of the "Streisand Effect"? Look it up -- banning anything is a form of publicity. It quite possibly attracts more people to the banned work than it shuts out.
  • by bumblebees ( 1262534 ) on Monday April 18, 2022 @12:57AM (#62455720)
    Does America understand they are becomming the exact (maybe even worse) thing they run all over the world "protecting" people from? But they feed (read brainwash) their people patriotism since childhood so they will not question the crazy that is going on there.
    • This isn't all of "America": it's actually a relatively small percentage of the population. It just happens to be the dumbest and loudest percentage. Every population has a segment just like these clowns. But they're a problem because they vote, and more regularly than any other block in our society.
  • ...at least they are reading?

    Although I, and any sane individual, should be troubled by that last line "...They just need an adult to help them interpret it."

    Sure they do.

  • What they need is an adult to help them process it

    This can't work due to supply chain issues.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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