The freedom to read is under assault in the US, according to a damning new report from writers body PEN America. The report follows a similar survey by the American Library Association. PEN Americas report states: The freedom to read is under assault in the United Statesparticularly in public schoolscurtailing students freedom to explore words, ideas, and books..
It notes that in the 202223 school year, PEN America recorded 3,362 instances of books banned, an increase of 33 percent from the 202122 school year.
Among the key findings are:
- Over 40 percent of all book bans occurred in school districts in Florida.
- Hyperbolic and misleading rhetoric about porn in schools and sexually explicit, harmful, and age-inappropriate materials led to the removal of thousands of books covering a range of topics and themes for young audiences. Overwhelmingly, book bans target books on race or racism or featuring characters of colour, as well as books with LGBTQ+ characters.
- Punitive state laws, coupled with pressure from vocal citizens and local and national groups, have created difficult dilemmas for school districts, forcing them to either restrict access to books or risk penalties for educators and librarians.
PEN America says that in the past two and a half years, it has tracked an evolving movement to exert ideological control over public education across the United States. This campaignwhich PEN America has dubbed the Ed Scare, is penetrating public libraries, higher education institutions, and public schools, using state legislation and intimidation tactics to suppress teaching and learning about certain stories, identities, and histories.
It says: Efforts to suppress free expression are particularly pervasive in public schools, where coordinated campaigns to restrict the freedom to read, learn, and think are affecting students nationwide. PEN America has tracked the spread of explicit prohibitions to restrict teaching about topics such as race, gender, American history, and LGBTQ+ identities in K12 and higher educationwhich we have dubbed educational gag orders These legislative efforts work in tandem with coordinated campaigns locally, enabling local groups and individuals to challenge curricula, movies, songs, art, plays and thousands and thousands of books.
It concludes: Public schools have long been deemed essential to American democracy Over the past two years, coordinated and ideologically driven threats, challenges, and legislation directed at public school classrooms and libraries have spurred a wave of book bans unlike any in recent memory, diminishing students access to books and directly impacting their constitutional rights.