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Mittwoch, 29. April 2020

An Alaska school board’s plan to take classics off the curriculum backfired (to say the least) / Corinne Segal April 28, 2020 Lit Hub

There’s nothing like banning a book to make it seem cool.
The Matanuska-Susitna (Mat-Su) Borough School Board, which is based in Palmer, Alaska and whose district comprises more than 19,000 students, voted to take five novels off the high school curriculum, inspiring a backlash from the community and a dedicated reading challenge.
The five books—The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, Catch-22 by Joseph Heller, The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, and I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou—were removed for reasons including mentions of incest, sexual references, and profanity. (If you’d like to see a detailed description of each book’s merits followed by a much briefer reason why each of them were removed, you can read the district’s notes here.)
According to a report from CNN, the books now seem to be the talk of the town, with community members creating livestreamed readings, a book club, and, my personal favorite response, the Mat-Su Valley Banned Book Challenge, which will award a $100 prize to someone who reads all five of them. If this was an elaborate case of reverse psychology, then I’m calling it a success.

via https://lithub.com/an-alaska-school-boards-plan-to-take-classics-off-the-curriculum-backfired-to-say-the-least/

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