According to data compiled by the American Library Association (ALA), 50 percent of the 147 censorship attempts cataloged in 2020 came from parents and 20 percent from patrons of public libraries. Political and religious groups made up 9 percent of proposed bans, while demands by government or educational institution officials constituted 11 percent of the total number of book censorship attempts. Some of the core reasons given for a proposed ban were the highlighting of LGBTQIA+ content, certain religious or political viewpoints as well as anti-police sentiment and profanity. Analyzing the annual top 10 lists given out by the ALA up until 2018, S.F. Whitaker from Book Riot concludes that the biggest issue for censorship advocates is the propagation of queer topics and outright sexual references.
This also reflects in the top 10 of the most challenged books in 2020: "George", a story about a young trans girl aimed at 3rd to 7th graders by author Alex Gino, claimed the top spot. "George" is followed by "Stamped" by Ibram X. Kendi and Jason Reynolds and "All American Boys" by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely, both of which deal with racism and the experience of Black people in the U.S. This, of course, only reflects the reported censorship attempts. The ALA estimates upward of 82 percent of book ban proposals to go unreported per year.

No comments:
Post a Comment