Banned Books Week, Sept. 23-30
Banned Books Week: Celebrating the Freedom to Read is observed
during the last week of September each year. This year it is from Sept.
23 – 30. Observed since 1982, the annual event reminds Americans
not to take this precious democratic freedom for granted.
Banned Books Week (BBW) celebrates the freedom to choose or the
freedom to express one’s opinion even if that opinion might be
considered unorthodox or unpopular. It stresses the importance of
ensuring the availability of those unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints
to all who wish to read them. After all, intellectual freedom can exist
only where these two essential conditions are met.
Between 1990 and 2000, of the 6,364 challenges reported to or recorded by the Office for Intellectual Freedom:
- 1,607 were challenges to “sexually explicit” material (up 161 since 1999)
- 1,427 to material considered to use “offensive language” (up 165 since 1999)
- 1,256 to material considered “unsuited to age group” (up 89 since 1999)
- 842 to material with an “occult theme or promoting the occult or Satanism” (up 69 since 1999)
- 737 to material considered to be “violent” (up 107 since 1999)
- 515 to material with a homosexual theme or “promoting homosexuality” (up 18 since 1999)
- 419 to material “promoting a religious viewpoint” (up 22 since 1999)
- 317 to material involving “nudity” (up 20 since 1999)
- 267 to material involving “racism” (up 22 since 1999)
- 224 to material involving “sex education” (up 7 since 1999)
- 202 to material considered to be “anti-family” (up 9 since 1999)
Links
- Proclamation from the Butler Libraries
Quotes relating to Banned Books Week
Challenged and Banned Books
The Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2005
The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990-2000
What’s the Difference Between Challenged and Banned?
Google Book Search’s Banned Books Page
American Library Association (ALA)’s Banned Books Week page
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression