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On Censorship
On Censorship: A Public Librarian Examines Cancel Culture in the US | James LaRue
2 posts | 2 to read
"An insightful and humorous look into the complex issues of censorship, Jamie LaRue's book is at times intellectually and emotionally challenginglike all of the best books should be." R. Alan Brooks, Comics Creator and Professor, Professor of Graphic Narrative, Regis University In America today, more books are being banned than ever before. This censorship is part of a larger assault on such American institutions as schools, public libraries, and universities. In On Censorship: A Public Librarian Examines Cancel Culture in the US, respected long-time public librarian James LaRue issues a balanced and reasonable call to action for all citizens. LaRue, who served as director of the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom and executive director of the Freedom to Read Foundation, highlights the dangers of book banning and censorship in our public and educational spaces. Synthesizing his more than twenty-five years of experience on the front lines of these issues, he takes the reader through attempts he encountered to remove or restrict access to ideas, while placing the debate in the greater context about the role of libraries and free expression in a democratic society. LaRue covers topics such as: The role of the library in American culture and community The consequences of cancel culture Seven things citizens can do to quell book banning and censorship attempts By examining past efforts at censorship and their dangerous impacts, LaRue asks the reader to reflect on how those times are not so different from today. This book is essential reading for all those who believe in free expression, who support libraries, and who cherish the central freedoms that American democracy represents.
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Tamra
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😢😭

Oh the the sick & sad irony re: a raiding officer had 1984 in his hands and didn‘t know what it was about, had to ask the shop owner.

https://www.npr.org/2025/02/14/nx-s1-5294328/israel-raid-bookstore-east-jerusale...

Librarybelle 😢 1mo
dabbe 🤯😞🤯 1mo
GingerAntics This is heartbreaking. This poor family. Unfortunately, I cannot find any mention of the book 1984, simply that the store opened in that year. 1mo
See All 9 Comments
Tamra @GingerAntics it‘s referenced in the audio story. He recounts the experience of the raid. 🙁 1mo
GingerAntics @Tamra 🤦🏼‍♀️ sorry, couldn‘t listen. It‘s really sad that the people taking books are NEVER readers. I just can‘t even with people. 1mo
Tamra @GingerAntics I know. 😖 1mo
GingerAntics @Tamra and they never pick up “Gulliver‘s Travels” and ask “what‘s this about?” It‘s always 1984 or Animal Farm or Lord of the Flies. 1mo
rwmg @GingerAntics Because they think they know Gulliver's Travels is a kid's book about Lilliput and so they don't know they are Yahoos. 1mo
GingerAntics @rwmg 🤣😂🤣 1mo
53 likes1 stack add9 comments
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Tamra
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Aghast at FL‘s board of Ed eliminating sociology as a core general education course in college curriculum. I have a new collective noun, which I‘m too polite to share among such nice people here on Litsy.

They‘ve replaced it with another history course. I am guessing the prefix & number of said course is KKK 101.

Venting………

TheBookHippie I hear ya. 1y
TheBookHippie Douchebagcanoe works in polite company 🤦🏻‍♀️😵‍💫 1y
See All 12 Comments
SamAnne And what is their so-called reasoning? 1y
Tamra @SamAnne “dangerous ideologies” 🙄 Prohibited DEI spending too. (edited) 1y
JenReadsAlot Omg... 1y
Susanita A fat lot of good it‘s done de Santis sucking up to extremists. 1y
BarbaraBB That is scary as f**k 1y
MicheleinPhilly 🙄 Christ. 1y
sarahbarnes Terrifying. 1y
jlhammar Wow, hadn‘t read about this yet. Unbelievable. 1y
Jeg Very very scary. 1y
55 likes12 comments