Danger in the Sacred Grove: A Library Love Story by Dean Gloster
I was born in Reno, Nevada, and spent a huge part of my youth in the amazing, slightly disturbing, and thoroughly weird Washoe County Library. I loved that library. Floors and floors of bookshelves lined both sides of a huge atrium, with large circular reading areas each held up by single columns and surrounded by plants. It was as if the architect had been told, “Build an amazing library, but make sure it’s also the perfect location for a light-saber duel, a decade from now, when Star Wars comes out. In a rainforest. But with good lighting.” Check.
The
circular reading areas, little islands that rose several stories, would wobble when
children tromped up or down the stairways that connected them to the shelving
floor above or below. So while what you were read had transported you to Oz, or
Mars, or Middle Earth, you’d also be literally shaken up every few minutes and
get to experience a mini earthquake.
It felt like a sacred, exciting grove dedicated to helping us grow.
I think
about that sometimes, especially now that libraries and books and schools are
under attack by the rising tide of right-wing authoritarianism in America.
Books are
being banned. Librarians and teachers are being fired. Librarians are being
threatened with criminal prosecution for the books in their libraries. The
attacks are often against books that: (1) Simply portray the existence of gay,
lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or queer people. (2) Accurately describe the
history of slavery and racism in this country or their effects today. (3) Were
authored by women, people of color, or LGBTQ+ authors.
In just 4 days this month:
·
Florida banned 41% of all school math textbooks as
containing elements of “CRT” “social-emotional learning” or other prohibited
topics. In grades K-5, Florida banned 71% of math textbooks, leaving only one
publisher, Accelerate Learning. Coincidentally, that publisher is owned by the
private equity fund of which Virginia’s GOP Governor Glenn Youngkin used to be
CEO. (Virginia is seeking a similar ban.)
·
Kentucky passed a law giving single local partisan politicians control
over libraries starting in 2023. Judge Elects, who are not librarians, will
have control over libraries and can close the libraries and sell the buildings
to other educational institutions, including private, for-profit and religious
schools.
·
After prohibiting state university faculty from
testifying about the discriminatory impact of redistricting, Florida eliminated tenure for all Florida state university professors, to “prevent educators from
bringing their political views into the classroom” that are not “in line with
the state’s priorities.” The new law requires tenured faculty to be re-reviewed
every five years by the state-appointed Board of Trustees, which can now fire
professors without cause.
·
Florida’s Governor DeSantis, angry about the
mild criticism by the state’s largest employer, The Walt Disney Company, of his
new “don’t say gay” law prohibiting discussion in primary schools of the
existence of LGBTQ people, signed a bill revoking Disney’s self-governing
district, saddling each family in the Orlando area with $2200 of bond debt to
be repaid.
·
In a tacit acknowledgement that its new “don’t
say gay” law was devastating to the mental health of its LGBTQ+ kids and kids
from LGBTQ+ families, Florida quietly withdrew from further participation in a
31-year-old CDC study on student depression, suicide, sexuality, and sexual
identity.
· Walton County, Florida, banned 58 books from its libraries, including the picture book Everywhere Babies because two of the pictures in its 32 pages could be interpreted to imply that there are same sex couples among the parents. The complete list:
But cruelty
is the point. So far this year, 238 bills to limit the rights of LGBTQ people
have been introduced in 26 states, an average of three a day. It’s part of a
broader trend of rising authoritarianism and othering that aims to make the
U.S. more like Putin’s Russia, where gay pride parades are banned with criminal
penalties, on the false premise that merely acknowledging the existence of gay
people is the equivalent of soliciting minors.
I hope, and
believe, this effort to deny reality and to impose censorship, silence, and
ignorance will ultimately fail, but not until it instills fear and does its
best to damage learning institutions and careers.
It’s not
popular even with most Republican voters. A recent poll found that a majority
of Republicans favor teaching all aspects of American history—including the
legacy of slavery and racism and how this legacy affects our laws,
institutions, and society even today. Younger, GenZ/Millennial Republican voters,
favored this the margin of 59-28%.
And it’s
not going to work in imposing a permanent barrier to knowledge. In response to book
banning elsewhere, the Brooklyn Public Library has announced its “Books
Unbanned Initiative”—that anyone aged 13-21, anywhere in the U.S., can get a
free digital library card giving access to the library’s entire digital
collection. No parental permission is required.
Because we
need more information about a lot of things, not less. For all my countless
hours of exploration of the Washoe County Library when I was young, there are
lots of books on topics available today that I’d never heard of back then—wonderful,
well-written books about history and reality and possibility.
You know,
the things one should encounter in a sacred grove of learning—a library
designed to help us grow.
Evil seems to be oozing out from an endless number of rocks these days. I'm really hoping that those afflicted with complacency wake up before November. I write fantasy, but can't imagine these can be a majority who support this tide of evil.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't heard of the "Books Unbanned Initiative." How completely cool.
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