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Maia Kobabe’s award-winning graphic novel memoir Gender Queer has been challenged in several states. (The all-white school board said it was coincidence that almost all the material banned was by or about people of colour.) Bechdel’s Fun Home, the acclaimed graphic memoir about her father’s sexuality and her own, was pulled from shelves in North Kansas over its LGBTQ themes, while a southern Pennsylvania district banned a lengthy list of titles almost entirely by or about people of colour, by acclaimed authors including Jacqueline Woodson, Ijeoma Oluo and Ibram X Kendi. Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye has been removed from school libraries in Utah over its “explicit” content in Virginia, the Nobel laureate’s Beloved has been challenged for similar reasons. We’re seeing what appears to be a campaign to remove books, particularly books dealing with LGBTQIA themes and books dealing with racism.” “Social media is amplifying local challenges and they’re going viral, but we’ve also been observing a number of organisations activating local members to go to school board meetings and challenge books.
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We’ve never had a time when we’ve gotten four or five reports a day for days on end, sometimes as many as eight in a day,” says ALA director Deborah Caldwell-Stone. “It’s a volume of challenges I’ve never seen in my time at the ALA – the last 20 years.
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From calls in Virginia to burn “sexually explicit” books in a school library to a wave of challenges to titles by authors ranging from Toni Morrison to Alison Bechdel, the American Library Association is charting an unprecedented rise in attempts to ban books in libraries – many of which it believes are fuelled by organised conservative campaigns.