[Vision2020] Unnecessary Editing
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Tue Dec 2 09:42:03 PST 2008
Censorship, in the form of banning books, lives in the Coeur d'Alene
School District.
>From the Editor's Page of today's (December 2, 2008) Spokesman Review -
------------------------------------------------------------
Unnecessary editing
Our View: No need to drop novel from CdA curriculum
December 2, 2008
Samuel Wurzelbacher's book was released this week, barely a month and a
half after he became famous under the name he shares with the title of his
literary creation "Joe the Plumber."
We'll venture a guess that in 60 or 70 years, high school students
throughout the nation will not be assigned to read "Joe the Plumber
Fighting for the American Dream."
That's not a criticism. Few books achieve lasting readership and
relevance. Few books capture the truths, including the unpleasant ones,
that define culture and force readers to examine their own humanity in
depth. Few books become classics.
Those that do produce two predictable consequences:
Scholars identify them as essential reading for young people who are
learning about their cultural tradition.
Parents of some of those children object. Not because of a book's
literary quality but because of disagreement over how long they should
preserve their sons' and daughters' innocence about uncomfortable
realities.
One book familiar to such squabbles is Aldous Huxley's 76-year-old
novel "Brave New World." In less than two weeks the Coeur d'Alene School
District is scheduled to decide whether to remove the controversial work
of fiction from the required reading list for seniors.
Parts of "Brave New World," you see, depict sexual intercourse as useful
for something more than procreation. Something pleasant, even. Assigning
such material to 18-year-olds offends some parents and some students.
The issue in Coeur d'Alene isn't about forcing every last senior to read a
potentially objectionable book. It's about letting those objections
deprive all students of that book as a part of their curriculum. Like many
other school districts, Coeur d'Alene allows youngsters who are offended
by a required book, such as "Brave New World," to select something else to
read from a list of alternative titles.
That should be sufficient.
But if the school board accedes to pressure Dec. 15 and removes Huxley's
classic from the assigned reading list, students will see their options
narrowed. Keep that up, and at some point they may be reading "Joe the
Plumber" after all.
------------------------------------------------------------
Seeya at the library, Moscow.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"For a lapse Lutheran born-again Buddhist pan-Humanist Universalist
Unitarian Wiccan Agnostic like myself there's really no reason ever to go
to work."
- Roy Zimmerman
---------------------------------------------
This message was sent by First Step Internet.
http://www.fsr.com/
More information about the Vision2020
mailing list