Banning books: Protecting kids or erasing humanity?

Kasey Meehan says it was her long-standing love of books that made her, in a sense, their political advocate.

“As simple as that sounds, I think that’s what brings a lot of people on the team to this role,” said Ms. Meehan, program director of the Freedom to Read initiative at PEN America. “For many of us, reading has been such a fundamental part of our own self-discovery and a kind of self-awareness building experience.”

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Amid the battle over what children can read in school, Banned Books Week highlights books as an essential tool for educators to teach empathy and create informed citizens. Parental rights organizations claim that children do better when parents also have a say in what they read.

It’s a particularly busy week for Ms. Meehan and her organization as they take part in Banned Books Week, highlighting what they see as the dangers of banning books in schools, especially at a time when such bans are underway in the United States increased. According to a recent report from PEN America, there has been a spike in book ban efforts during the 2022-2023 school year, including more than 3,300 cases in districts where more than 1,550 titles have been removed from school shelves.

For Ms. Meehan and others, the power of books is integral to their vision of a democratic society. “Book bans only pose a real threat to developing a deeper understanding and empathy for others in our highly pluralistic society – the ways in which we can see each other’s humanity,” she says.

Kasey Meehan says it was her long-standing love of books that made her, in a sense, their political advocate.

“As simple as that sounds, I think that’s what brings a lot of people in the team to this role,” says Ms Meehan, program director from the Freedom to Read initiative of PEN America, a nonprofit organization that advocates for freedom of expression at the intersection of human rights and literature. “For many of us, reading has been such a fundamental part of our own self-discovery and a kind of self-awareness building experience.”

In some ways, it is precisely this power of books and ideas that has often placed them at the center of politics, either to strengthen existing authority or to pose a threat. Given the emotional impact of literature and storytelling, it is perhaps not surprising that those who want to ban certain books understand its potential impact and power.

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Amid the battle over what children can read in school, Banned Books Week highlights books as an essential tool for educators to teach empathy and create informed citizens. Parental rights organizations claim that children do better when parents also have a say in what they read.

It is a particularly busy week for Ms. Meehan and her organization as they participate in the annual Banned Books Week, founded in 1982 and sponsored by a consortium from publishers and non-profit organizations. This year they are highlighting what they see as the dangers of banning books in schools, especially at a time when such bans have increased in the United States, especially in Republican-led states.

For Ms. Meehan and others, the power of books and ideas is integral to their vision of a democratic society. “Book bans only pose a real threat to developing a deeper understanding and empathy for others in our highly pluralistic society – the ways in which we can see each other’s humanity,” Ms Meehan said.

According to a recent report from PEN America, there has been a spike in book ban efforts during the 2022-2023 school year, including more than 3,300 cases in certain school districts where more than 1,550 titles have been removed from school shelves.

Lisa Rathke/AP

Vermont author Tanya Lee Stone reads from her banned book during a lecture and discussion on banned books given by Lt. Governor David Zuckerman (far left) at Bridgeside Books in Waterbury, August 13, 2023.

“Examining the scope of the past two years, books featuring diverse characters, primarily characters of color and LGBTQ+ characters, were overwhelmingly subject to book bans,” wrote Ms. Meehan as lead author of the PEN America report. The vast majority of these books are also considered young adult titles, she says.