PUBLIC EDUCATION
PORNOGRAPHIC BOOKS IN SCHOOLS
BY JACKSON ELLIOTT
Activists fight to keep sexually explicit books in schools, parents say
44 E P O C H I N S I G H T Week 44, 2022
âGender Queerâ by Maia Kobabe, which has drawings of people having sex; âAll Boys Arenât Blueâ by George Johnson, which gives a vivid description of two male children having sex; and âOut of Darknessâ by Ashley Hope Perez, which includes at least one passage describing a sexual assault against a minor. Content that parents might find disturbing in those books and others often found in school libraries is detailed in reports on an independent review site called BookLooks. That organization endeavors to help parents âfind out what objectionable content may be in your childâs book before they do.â
Opposing Porn Is Racist? Attempts to remove books from school libraries is âabout white supremacy,â the BookRiot guide says. âItâs about power.
Calling it anything less than that diminishes the responsibility there is on gatekeepers to uphold intellectual freedom and the First Amendment.â Teachers, librarians, and other educators are the âgatekeepers,â says the BookRiot website. The BookRiot guide blames news media for spotlighting parentsâ concerns about books they deem too graphic to be made available to children. The tool kit suggests using local news media as âa tool of supportâ to help prevent parents from being successful in attempts to remove books from school libraries. It advises citizens, teachers, educators, librarians, and administrators to take specific actions to prevent parents from having books removed. BookRiotâs advice includes instructing citizens to âcontact local media and lo-
CLOCKWISE FROM L: CHRISTOPHER FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES, TERRI WU/ THE EPOCH TIMES, AMBER BERTRAND FOR THE EPOCH TIMES
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ooks th at conta in explicit sexual material should prevail over parentsâ efforts to remove them from school libraries, according to a website that fights against what it calls âcensorshipâ of books. BookRiot, which describes itself as âthe largest independent editorial book site in North America,â offers a âHow to Fight Book Bans and Challenges: An Anti-Censorship Tool Kit.â The guide advises how libraries can fight parentsâ attempts to remove certain books from their shelves. BookRiot recommends books as part of its âcommitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, and the action steps weâre taking to walk the walk.â Some of the books the organization advocates for keeping in libraries include