True Stories of Censorship Battles in America's Libraries—eEditions e-book

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$41.40
Price
$46.00
Item Number
978-0-8389-9387-3
Published
2012
Publisher
ALA Editions
Pages
200
Format
eBook
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  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • About the authors
  • Reviews

Intellectual freedom is a core value of librarianship, but fighting to keep controversial materials on the shelves can sometimes feel like a lonely battle. And not all censorship controversies involve the public objecting to a book in the collection—libraries are venues for displays and meetings, and sometimes library staff themselves are tempted to preemptively censor a work. Those facing censorship challenges can find support and inspiration in this book, which compiles dozens of stories from library front lines. Edifying and enlightening, this collection

  • Tells the stories of librarians who withstood difficult circumstances to champion intellectual freedom
  • Touches on prickly issues such as age-appropriateness, some librarians' temptation to preemptively censor, sensitive cultural expressions, and criminality in the library
  • Presents case studies of defenses that were unsuccessful, so librarians facing similar challenges can learn from these defeats

There are fewer situations more stressful in a librarian's professional life than being personally confronted with a demand to remove a book from the shelves or not knowing how to respond to other kinds of censorship challenges. Reading this book will help fortify and inform those in the fray.

Foreword, by Ellen Hopkins
Introduction


Part I: Sometimes We're Our Own Worst Enemy: When Library Employees Are Censors
Chapter 1 Where There Once Was None

 

Lucy Bellamy

Chapter 2 Well-Intentioned Censorship Is Still Censorship: The Challenge of Public Library Employees

 

 

Ron Critchfield and David M. Powell

Chapter 3 If I Don't Buy It, They Won't Come

 

 

Peggy Kaney

Chapter 4 Mixed-Up Ethics

 

 

Susan Patron


Part II: How Dare You Recommend This Book to a Child: Reading Levels and Sophisticated Topics
Chapter 5 Clue-less in Portland

 

 

Natasha Forrester

Chapter 6 Vixens, Banditos, and Finding Common Ground

 

 

Alisa C. Gonzalez

Chapter 7 Long Live the King (Novels)!

 

 

Angela Paul

Chapter 8 Parent Concern about Classroom Usage Spills Over into School Library

 

 

Laurie Treat

Chapter 9 The Princess Librarian: An Allegory

 

 

Sherry York

Chapter 10 The Complexity and Challenges of Censorship in Public Schools: Overstepping Boundaries, Cultivating Compassionate Conversations

 

 

Marie-Elise Wheatwind


Part III: Not Only Boy Scouts Should Be Prepared: Building Strong Policies
Chapter 11 I Owe It All to Madonna

 

 

Lisë Chlebanowski

Chapter 12 The Battle to Include

 

 

Gretchen Gould

Chapter 13 Pornography and Erotica in an Academic Library

 

 

Michelle Martinez

Chapter 14 Reasonable Accommodation: Why Our Library Created Voluntary Kids Cards

 

 

Matt Nojonen


Part IV: When the Tribe Has Spoken: Working with Native American Collections
Chapter 15 Cultural Sensitivity or Censorship?

 

 

Susanne Caro

Chapter 16 Developing the Public Library's Genealogy Euchee/Yuchi Collection

 

 

Cathlene Myers Mattix


Part V: Conversation + Confrontation + Controversy = Combustion: Vocal Organization and Publicly Debated Challenges
Chapter 17 32 Pages, 26 Sentences, 603 Words, and $500,000 Later: When School Boards Have Their Way

 

 

Lauren Christos

Chapter 18 The Respect of Fear

 

 

Amy Crump

Chapter 19 Sweet Movie

 

 

Sydne Dean

Chapter 20 Censorship Avoided: Student Activism in a Texas School District

 

 

Robert Farrell

Chapter 21 I Read It in the Paper

 

 

Hollis Helmeci

Chapter 22 Uncle Bobby's Wedding

 

 

James LaRue

Chapter 23 A Community Divided

 

 

Kristin Pekoll

Chapter 24 The Author Visit That Should Have Been

 

 

Karin Perry

Chapter 25 One of Those Not So Hideous Stories of a Book Challenge

 

 

Kathryn Prestidge


Part VI: Crime and Punishment: When Library Patrons Have Committed a Crime
Chapter 26 A Serial Killer Visits the Library

 

 

Paul Hawkins

Chapter 27 Books, Bars, and Behavior: Censorship in Correctional Libraries

 

 

Erica MacCreaigh


Part VII: Perhaps It Is Possible to Judge a Book by Its Cover: Displays
Chapter 28 The Ghost of Halloween Past

 

 

Kathy Barco

Chapter 29 The Neophyte in the New Age

 

 

Rosemary J. Kilbridge

Chapter 30 Gay Books Display Brings Out High School Faculty Prejudice

 

 

Nadean Meyer

Chapter 31 Censorship Looms Over the Rainbow

 

 

Cindy Simerlink

 

 

Discussion Questions
Contributors

 

Valerie Nye

Valerie Nye is the Library Director at the Santa Fe Community College. She previously worked as a library director at the Institute of American Indian Arts and as a library consultant at the New Mexico State Library, where she started researching and training others on intellectual freedom and banned books. She has coedited a book with Kathy Barco, True Stories of Censorship Battles in America’s Libraries, and a literary research guide with R. Neil Scott, Postmarked Milledgeville: A Guide to Flannery O'Connor's Correspondence in Libraries and Archives. She currently serves on the board of Amigos Library Services and holds an MLIS from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Kathy Barco

Kathy Barco is a Library Consultant, having recently retired from Albuquerque's public library system, where she was Literacy Coordinator. She contributed to Thinking Outside the Book: Essays for Innovative Librarians and wrote the foreword to Librarians As Community Partners: An Outreach Handbook. Barco’s READiscover New Mexico: A Tri-Lingual Adventure in Literacy won a New Mexico Book Award. She is on the board of the New Mexico Library Foundation and received the New Mexico Library Association’s Leadership Award in 2006.

"These stories, which are all short and well-written, provide some inspirational examples of librarians who are fighting for user access to materials."
--Information Today

"An impressive work of considerable and diverse scholarship ... mandatory reading for library professionals, as well as free speech advocates and library patrons with an interest in library censorship issues."
--Internet Bookwatch

"In the introduction, editors Nye and Barco write: "We hope that this book provides insights into how librarians protect the First Amendment in their communities.' The editors have succeeded, as readers of this book will understand that many librarians have learned that defending the First Amendment can be stressful and difficult — though ultimately rewarding."
--First Amendment Center

"Serves as a valuable reminder for librarians to be aware of the varied forms censorship and our own cultural contexts and biases, while recognizing that libraries belong to everyone."
--Colorado Libraries