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No Excuses Reading Journal for Banned Books
No Excuses Reading Journal for Banned Books | Tracy Tennant
3 posts | 2 to read
You know what "curiosity did to the cat." Ah, yes; but a cat has nine lives. Satisfaction is sure to "bring you back" when you read some of the most currently and historically challenged books in the United States. Freedom of expression is one of our most cherished rights, along with the freedom to access information. Books are often banned because they challenge the status quo. They disrupt our paradigms and encroach on our comfort-zones. But if we want to make a difference and make our world a better place, we must be willing to be confronted with opposing ideas, learn from history, and sometimes just agree to disagree without hostility. Reading challenged literature can give us insight and understanding into other points of view, even though we might not embrace them. The purpose of this journal is to help you set reading goals and apply what you learn to your own life. Make a list of up to 24 challenged or formerly banned books you want to read over the next year. Reflect on the insights you gain, write them down, and when possible put them into practice. Featuring four pages of reflective fill-in-the-blanks for every book on your list. Blank pages are provided at the end of the journal for extra note-taking. A great resource for avid readers interested in widening their horizons!
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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Susanita 19 pages! 🤬 13h
ManyWordsLater I‘m having difficulty articulating to friends the difference because library curation and banning books. 12h
Riveted_Reader_Melissa Well if you curate out anything to do with racism, gender, feminism, or transgender…you maybe are not curating a collection on a specific topic but removing a complete topic. For instance….race books out, Mein Kampf in…you could say more war history related…. But also out as feminism books about the underground movement of women in Afghanistan….which was probably pretty important in a fairly recent war. So I think it‘s the how, why, & ⤵️ 12h
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa ↪️ purpose. I am not a librarian, I should add. But I would think curating a collection is different from say removing from a library. My public library has the library, and a separate curated section on local history….but that does not mean they removed every book from the main library on any other subject. 12h
shortsarahrose @ManyWordsLater - I‘ll add, as a library worker/person with a masters in library science, collection development has more to do with building a collection that reflects a wide range of viewpoints on any given topic - even those that we may not personally agree with or that the majority of our community may not agree with. Censorship is removing or refusing to purchase items that don‘t align with a certain view. 12h
Riveted_Reader_Melissa And why on earth Maya Angelou needed to be cut, only makes sense if it‘s a military curated collection…. But I did not see any other books of American classics novels of that sort listed. Just hers. And I find it hard to believe there was only 1 classic literature book in the library. No Steinbeck for example. 12h
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @shortsarahrose Thank you! I knew we needed a librarian! When in doubt, always ask a librarian. 12h
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Susanita right! I had heard about it when it happened, but today was the first time I had seen a complete list. Very interesting what topics the removed books seemed to be centered around. And so nice they included the topics for each books, and I‘m assuming the rational for pulling them. 12h
ncsufoxes It‘s an odd collection of books, meaning it‘s kind of all over the place. A few repeated titles (some have different publication dates but some are repeated 2-3xs). There are only a few fiction books. I‘m surprised The 1619 Project wasn‘t on there. It is interesting to see what they find intimidating. My guess is whoever curated this list probably hasn‘t read one of these books. They probably used AI to generate the list. 11h
20 likes9 comments
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KathyWheeler
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1: Absolutely. I most recently read Gender Queer simply because of attempts to ban it. I also read Looking for Alaska and The Poet X for this reason.
2: Probably so. The American Library Association has only been keeping lists since 1990 and my mother didn‘t censor my reading; instead she encouraged me to read widely, so I‘m sure I read controversial books.
3. Drama by Raina Telgemeier
#sundayfunday

BookmarkTavern Yeah, I‘ve been wondering how under the radar removing books was before the ALA started keeping track. Thanks for posting! 3y
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DebinHawaii
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#FallTreasures (catchup from yesterday)

This PBS article has the 100 most challenged or #bannedbook (s) from the past decade. Do you have any favorites on here? 📚

https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/blog/here-are-the-100-most-banned-and-c...

Eggs Found 30 titles I‘ve read!! Great list! 4y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks I didn‘t know about some of these! 4y
smalldogs_bigbooks2419 The Glass Castle is one of my favorite books! 4y
50 likes3 comments