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LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
©Copyright 2005 NCAC
WEB DESIGN
Jeanne Criscola Criscola Design
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NCAC Censorship News Issue #85:
The Long And The Short Of It
Spring
2002
- Michigan's "cussing canoeist" was recently vindicated
when the state appeals court struck down a 105-year-old
law banning vulgar language in front of women and children.
Timothy Boomer was convicted in 1998, after cursing
when he fell out of his canoe.
- Judy Blume's Forever has been returned
to the Eastview Middle School library in Elgin, Illinois
and William Styron's Sophie's Choice to La
Mirada High School library in California (Censorship
News 84).
- NCAC has generated a public debate in Nashville, Tennessee
in response to the Tennessee Arts Commission policy
to not display nudes in the gallery. We were alerted to
the controversy by artist Ernie Sandidge whose work was
accepted for exhibition but then rejected because it contained
nudity. We are planning a public forum to follow up on discussions
that have appeared in the local press and on radio. We and
many TN residents were amazed that an arts organization
should put a blanket ban on one of the central subjects
of art.
- When Mayor Carolyn Risher of Inglis, Florida issued
a proclamation to ban Satan from Inglis city limits, because
"God told her to," some residents hoped that crime rates
would drop, but religious endorsement by government officials
offends the First Amendment. Urged by the ACLU, the City
Council repudiated the Mayor's acts, required her to reimburse
expenses, and removed the Satan-banishing signs.
- New and Noteworthy:
At the Schoolhouse Gate, Lessons in Intellectual
Freedom, by Gloria Pipkin and ReLeah Cossett Lent.
Two talented language arts teachers who created award-winning
programs in Florida public schools, tell of herculean efforts
to preserve students' First Amendment rights while battling
bureaucratic censorship. A must-read for those who care
about teaching and learning.
The First Amendment and Civil Liberty, by
Robert O'Neil, examines the threat to free speech and the
press posed by lawsuits for damages against book publishers,
movie producers and journalists.
Harmful to Minors, by Judith Levine, tackles
the highly charged issue of minors and sexuality and argues
that children and teenagers are more harmed by censorship
and sexual repression than by ideas or information.
Censored Books II, Critical Viewpoints, 1985-2000,
by Nicholas J. Karolides, is a set of new rationales to
be used to defend frequently challenged books from Harry
Potter to Faulkner's As I Lay Dying.
Nigger, The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word,
by Randall Kennedy, explores the use of the word and by
whom, and analyzes the controversies to which it has given
rise.
The Last Summer of Reason, by prize-winning
Algerian author, Tahar Djaout, tells of the struggles of
a freethinking bookstore owner against a fundamentalist
regime taking over his country. The author was assassinated
for "wielding a fearsome pen."
X-Rated Children's Books, an online newsletter,
featuring book reviews and interviews with Banned, Censored,
Challenged Authors of Banned, Censored Challenged and Burned
Children's Books. To subscribe, email JroseEttaStone@aol.com
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