ICYMI: An analysis by The Washington Post found that "a majority of book challenges can be attributed to a very small number of people—11 to be exact."
These repeat challengers are often assisted by conservative book banning groups like Moms for Liberty. bookriot.com/washington-pos…
PEN America's April 2023 #BannedInTheUSA report documented "an escalation of book bans and censorship in classrooms and school libraries across the United States," with book bans most prevalent in Texas, Florida, Missouri, Utah, and South Carolina.
"The deepest fear that book banners, homophobes and misogynists share is the terrifying possibility that reading and thinking might lead to questioning, or even challenging, long-held biases!" Nancy Kohl, in a letter to the New York Times.
"I don’t understand why... the burden was placed on parents to opt in to allow their children to access restricted titles... Those parents raising objections should be the ones to opt out, if certain books make them uncomfortable." Merri Rosenberg, in a letter to the NY Times.
Reality: "DeSantis is vastly playing down the extent to which individual school districts & libraries... have removed books... Florida ranks 2nd, as the state with the most bans, according to PEN America." nytimes.com/2023/05/24/us/…
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says reports of book banning in Florida are a "hoax" and that only "pornographic and inappropriate" materials have been removed from Florida classrooms.
In the 2021-22 school year PEN America documented 565 books banned in Florida schools. Some were banned permanently, others temporarily pending investigations. The result is the same: Students can’t access books. You can see how we define a book ban here. pen.org/book-bans-freq…
🧵A K-8 school in Miami-Dade County recently removed @TheAmandaGorman's The Hill We Climb from elementary school library shelves. They say it’s not been banned, but…
... When you restrict or diminish access to a book, that’s a ban.
Moving the book to middle school shelves means elementary students can’t or won’t get it.
Their access has diminished. (2/x)
The Hill We Climb was widely praised and read at a Presidential Inauguration.
It was moved to middle schools along with @OhReallyRio's The ABC’s of Black History.
This cannot be separated from the wider movement to restrict books by Black authors and about Black history. (3/x)
“The government should not foster censorship by proxy, allowing one person to decide what ideas are out of bounds for all,” said PEN America's Nadine Farid Johnson in a statement regarding PEN America's recent lawsuit against book bans in Florida. newrepublic.com/post/172938/fl…
Gorman said the reason she wrote “The Hill We Climb” was to give young people the chance to see “themselves in a historical moment,” adding that her publisher @penguinrandom has joined a PEN America Florida lawsuit to challenge book restrictions and bans. news.yahoo.com/amanda-gorman-…
🧵PEN America Files Lawsuit against Florida School District over Unconstitutional Book Bans
Lawsuit joined by @penguinrandom, parents, and authors asserts that Escambia County School Board unlawfully removes or restricts access to books about race, racism, and LGBTQ identities.
Our lawsuit alleges Escambia County has set out to exclude certain ideas from their school libraries by removing or restricting books, some of which have been on the shelves for years—even decades. Read more here: pen.org/pen-america-v-…
According to the lawsuit, the school board’s removal and restriction of access to books discussing race, racism, and LGBTQ identities, against the recommendations of the district review committee charged with evaluating book challenges, violates the First Amendment.
“Jean Faulk, a 65-year-old world history teacher… had carefully curated her classroom library over the years, and the task of combing through several hundred volumes seemed insurmountable. So later that day she stripped her shelves… only dictionaries and encyclopedias remained”
“In Jacksonville, a third-grade teacher penned an op-ed describing how one of her students, an avid reader, had cried after learning he couldn’t access the classroom library.” #FreedomToRead#Florida