Courage

Grow

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At Long Last, Dignity?

“I see it as something of profound significance,” he said. “Whether anyone winds up getting married in Maine, I don’t care. I care that they can get married.” That right means that gay people are equal to straight people. It recognizes their dignity. His dignity. You can read his entire column here.

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Voting Hearings Continue

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Banned Book Pick: A Clockwork Orange

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Banned Book Pick: To Kill a Mockingbird

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Banned Book Pick: Farenheit 451 - One of the Greatest Novels and Clearly the Greatest Irony of Banned Books Week

My banned book pick is Farenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury (1953).  While there are so many amazing books to choose from (Lord of the Rings, James and the Giant Peach, Cat's Cradle, etc.) I couldn't resist choosing Bradbury's classic novel.  Set in a future in which free thought and expression are discouraged and books are illegal, I can't help but point out the bizarre irony of banning a book about the evils of censorship and book banning.  On the surface, Farenheit 451 was banned because the author used "hell" and "damn" in the text, but it seems pretty clear concerns about the book's message about ran deeper.  The book was published in the era of McCarthyism, yet it encouraged the average person to oppose government's suppression of freedom of speech and expression.  Sadly, over 50 years later, it's still an important (and potentially threatening) message.  I feel lucky to have read Farenheit 451 (twice so far), and to live in a time and place where I can do so openly, and in public.  If we heed Bradbury's warning, and take up his message, I hope to not have to hide my copy in the walls of my air vent any time soon. “A book is a loaded gun in the house next door...Who knows who might be the target of the well-read man?” ― Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451 

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Banned Book Pick: Ulysses

My favorite banned book is also the subject of one of my favorite First Amendment cases (and one of my favorite ACLU cases). In Ulysses, James Joyce attempts to capture every moment of everyday life, in as much detail as possible, and everyday life (at least according to Joyce) includes a great deal of frank thought (and a small bit of explicit action) of a sexual nature. Characters notice the physical qualities of one another, they recall sexual situations from their pasts, and they plan sexual encounters for their future. There is infidelity, there is masturbation, and a sizable chunk of the end of the novel takes place in a brothel. All of this made the publication of Ulysses in 1922 an exceedingly unlikely event. The typesetting of the novel was done in France, by printers who did not know English. This made it easier to avoid censorship, though it did result in a comically high number of typographical errors. Import of Ulysses was banned in the United States under the obscenity laws, and in 1933 Random House and the ACLU arranged a test case to challenge the obscenity ban. Customs was notified that Ulysses was going to be shipped into New York, and the book was seized upon arrival. This led to the court case, United States v. One Book Called Ulysses. James Joyce and the First Amendment were both enormously fortunate that the case was assigned to U.S. District Judge John Woolsey. The government's claim against Ulysses were based on the argument that it was obscene, that it was blasphemy, and that it expressed coarse and barbaric thoughts (essentially, that the book was socially subversive).  Judge Woolsey approached these arguments in just the way one would hope a judge would. First, he read the novel (no easy feat). Then, he sought out other people who had read Ulysses (which was still banned in the entire English-speaking world), and he read commentaries on the novel, which were just beginning to appear. Judge Woolsey concluded that Ulysses was not obscene. "The words which are criticized as dirty," he noted "are old Saxon words known to almost all men, and, I venture, to many women, and are such words as would be naturally and habitually used, I believe, by the types of folk whose life, physical and mental, Joyce is seeking to describe."  Of the sexual scenarios detailed in the book, Judge Woolsey counseled that, "In respect of the recurrent emergence of the theme of sex in the minds of his characters, it must always be remembered that his locale was Celtic and his season Spring." It may seem obvious to us now, but it was a rather novel idea in law at the time that there could graphic descriptions of sex that were not designed to titillate. But, Judge Woolsey concluded that while "the effect of Ulysses on the reader undoubtedly is somewhat emetic, nowhere does it tend to be an aphrodisiac." The history of this case is documented in a wonderful book called "The Trials of Ulysses." And there are a number of great web resources about Ulysses. But, the best way to celebrate banned books week is to just read it. It is not easy, but its totally and completely worth it.

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Banned Book Pick: The Bluest Eye

Nobel Prize winning author Toni Morrison’s first novel, The Bluest Eye, stands out as one of my favorite banned books. The novel examines the consequences of social beauty norms enforced by an “outside gaze” that leads people to believe they lack beauty. Specifically, the story follows a young black girl named Pecola who adores Shirley Temple and thinks that blue eyes would make her lovable. In the afterword, Morrison says that her inspiration for the novel came from a conversation with an African-American elementary school girl who longed for blue eyes.   Though published in 1970, the novel broke the top five most banned books as recently as 2006.   

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What Are You Waiting For?

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