I am constantly fascinated by the issue of homosexuality and challenged books. I grew up in a small town in Wyoming and obviously knew of the stigma attached to being gay, I was also in high school in 1986 when I and my peers first became aware of AIDS, which made male homosexuality at least that much "worse." It wasn't until the appearance of AIDS that I realized homosexuality was problematic due to it being scary. I learned this in my discussions with my male friends when I found myself explaining why gay men were more prone to getting HIV than straight men and how that same exchange process made women much more vulnerable than straight men. It was there that I began the slow process of learning that not understanding something made it threatening.
Over the course of my life I've studied History and Folklore and this has only strengthened this conclusion. That anything that is not exactly like us (for some value of us) is Other and the other is scary. When I teach, I try to bring this up. Not necessarily on the subject of homosexuality (although if I can bring up the Golden Band of Thebes I do) but on the subject of the Other in general and how that has coloured our history and most of the wars and conquest. James Tiptree Jr. had a wonderful line in one of her stories which stated that the whole history of humanity has been to "find the other, f--k it, or die trying." Which I have followed up in my own thoughts with the idea that once we've had sex with the other, they often give birth to "us" making them us. Ultimately making everyone like everybody else.
It's getting harder and harder to object to people due to Other skin colour, race and religion, at least to do so out in the open. For whatever reason, in the realm of who one loves and who one sleeps with is still grounds for fear and therefore rejection.
This is why we feel it's ok to say that allowing people who love each other and are in committed relationships to get married with threaten the institution (this arguement always makes me want to declare that no celebrity should ever be allowed to get married because thier divorce rates are high and thier divorces are public and glamorized, but that would be a violation of thier civil rights). And, to keep this on the topic of intellectual freedom, it allows parents and religious activists to protest a book called Tango Makes Three about two male penguins raising an egg. This is a true story. I haven't investigated it sufficiently to find out if the penguins are having sex or not, but the people protesting it obviously assume they are or that children will assume they are. They don't take into consideration that male penguins are the ones who take care of the eggs in nature (or maybe they do and don't want their kids to know about that either because it might threaten "traditional" family roles, but that's just me being snarky). This is not a book about homosexuality. But it is fear of homosexuality, fear of what we percieve of as the other which makes it a threat.
It is also my personal suspicion that, given the general age group of its readers, that not a one of them is going to consider sex unless their parents bring it up. But then, I'm sheltered, I could be wrong.
Monday, February 23, 2009
Thursday, February 19, 2009
God and the FBI
The Intellectual Freedom has been remarkably silent toward me this week. Probably too many other things in my tiny little brain. Or perhaps I've been trying to find a topic other than the one which keeps drifting to the fore when listening to lectures and reading readings and other students' blogs. It is going to be difficult to say what I'm thinking without offending, but I might as well try. Although, coherence may be a greater problem than offense.
It starts with looking at one of texts, by James LaRue, where he talks about the various generations and how they look at censorship/protecting children from information. We of the baby boomer generation are tending toward being helicopter parents, who somehow expect children to spring fully formed from the protective cocoon of our skulls, fully armoured and prepared to deal with everything the world brings.
And then my thoughts drift to "discussions" I have with certain of my friends over the role of God in America. Most of these people tend to feel that a lot of organizations, including libraries, are trying to take God out of people's daily lives. Which inevitably leaves me to point out that "In God We Trust" didn't appear on the dollar until the 1950s...
Which, unless I'm wrong, was about the time the FBI came into being. And a week doesn't go past in this course, where we don't have at least one mention of the FBI or other authority figures trying to circumvent the ALA's intellectual freedom polices for reasons of greater or lesser validity. With differing degrees of sucess.
Leading me to the thought that this all seems to tie together, as by far, the largest groups trying to censor books in libraries identify themselves as Christian, and have religious belief and arguments behind thier desire to limit what we can read.
All of which gets me to the question of whether we are, as a culture, as "liberal" and culturally aware (of ourselves as well as the Other) as we think. Or, is the urge for censorship even greater now than it once was? Too much information perhaps?
It starts with looking at one of texts, by James LaRue, where he talks about the various generations and how they look at censorship/protecting children from information. We of the baby boomer generation are tending toward being helicopter parents, who somehow expect children to spring fully formed from the protective cocoon of our skulls, fully armoured and prepared to deal with everything the world brings.
And then my thoughts drift to "discussions" I have with certain of my friends over the role of God in America. Most of these people tend to feel that a lot of organizations, including libraries, are trying to take God out of people's daily lives. Which inevitably leaves me to point out that "In God We Trust" didn't appear on the dollar until the 1950s...
Which, unless I'm wrong, was about the time the FBI came into being. And a week doesn't go past in this course, where we don't have at least one mention of the FBI or other authority figures trying to circumvent the ALA's intellectual freedom polices for reasons of greater or lesser validity. With differing degrees of sucess.
Leading me to the thought that this all seems to tie together, as by far, the largest groups trying to censor books in libraries identify themselves as Christian, and have religious belief and arguments behind thier desire to limit what we can read.
All of which gets me to the question of whether we are, as a culture, as "liberal" and culturally aware (of ourselves as well as the Other) as we think. Or, is the urge for censorship even greater now than it once was? Too much information perhaps?
Friday, February 13, 2009
Brave, With Help
In an earlier post, I noted my interest in a book which I was uncertain about seeking out. I did not get around to hunting down the title, but my hope is that this is more due to having a brain like... one of those things with holes for straining water through.. a sieve! (apologies to the late, great Douglas Adams) than lack of courage. Fortunately for me, a redoubtable colleague found the title for me.
I promptly ordered Sayyid Qutb's In the Shade of the Qur'an and am about 100 pages in. As frequently happens in cases like this, it is a slippery slope. It is definitely a pro-Islam tract, as one would expect, but almost nothing in it speaks to me of the appalling treatment of women by the Taliban (just as nothing in the Qur'an does) or a justification for requiring farmers to grow drug crops rather than food in order to finance people blowing other people up, or other acts of extremism. In other words, while there are aspects of the book I disagree with philosophically and others I don't get due to cultural differences, I don't find it (so far at least) to be that extreme.
This is where the slippery slope comes in. The foreward noted that the author was a martyr to his cause, but seems to assume the reader knows all about him already. I don't. Therefore, this text makes me want to learn more about his history and to re-read the Qur'an besides in order to place his words in context and see if I can see the incitement to violence, the presupposed inherent danger of this work. So far no men in dark glasses and suits have come to the door to search for seditionist materials, scare my cat and comment on how long it's been since I've dusted anything, so I will probably put him on my list of people to learn more about. If I really want to get myself in trouble, I should order a book about Sayyid at the same time as something on Aryan (read pre-Hindu India) history.
Or maybe nobody's paying that much attention to me at all.
I promptly ordered Sayyid Qutb's In the Shade of the Qur'an and am about 100 pages in. As frequently happens in cases like this, it is a slippery slope. It is definitely a pro-Islam tract, as one would expect, but almost nothing in it speaks to me of the appalling treatment of women by the Taliban (just as nothing in the Qur'an does) or a justification for requiring farmers to grow drug crops rather than food in order to finance people blowing other people up, or other acts of extremism. In other words, while there are aspects of the book I disagree with philosophically and others I don't get due to cultural differences, I don't find it (so far at least) to be that extreme.
This is where the slippery slope comes in. The foreward noted that the author was a martyr to his cause, but seems to assume the reader knows all about him already. I don't. Therefore, this text makes me want to learn more about his history and to re-read the Qur'an besides in order to place his words in context and see if I can see the incitement to violence, the presupposed inherent danger of this work. So far no men in dark glasses and suits have come to the door to search for seditionist materials, scare my cat and comment on how long it's been since I've dusted anything, so I will probably put him on my list of people to learn more about. If I really want to get myself in trouble, I should order a book about Sayyid at the same time as something on Aryan (read pre-Hindu India) history.
Or maybe nobody's paying that much attention to me at all.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
If You Don't Say It, It Isn't Real
Following up on last week's posts and some other discussions that have been going on in class, I've started thinking about Folk Belief and Folk Magic in relation to attempts to censor books and subject matter. Not books on magic or belief, at least not specifically. And, oddly enough, books on folk magic (as long as they aren't labelled "witchcraft") don't seem to face anywhere near the challenges in libraries that things like Harry Potter do. My understanding of this is that people believe something that's labelled "folk" is old, antiquated and so obviously foolish that there's little chance of our children believing it and trying to follow it today.
The irony of this is that in trying to censor many of the works about sex, homosexuality, the culture and/or belief systems of people "who are not like us," a type of folk magic is being practised by those who would swear they do no such thing. This is the same magic that makes us squirm under compliments and denigrate our abilities when someone else praises them, and whisper "cancer" or "aids" when we're talking about someone who is terminally ill. It's even the magic that leads to putting people into sterile hospital rooms and pretending they aren't dying when everyone, except possibly them, knows they are, but that's a discussion for another venue entirely.
A long-standing belief has been that if something isn't said out loud, it isn't real. This comes from not wanting the devil or fairies or whatever other evil tormented a community to hear something and make it bad or worse or real. The same thing goes when trying to take books from libraries that have content which frightens or offends us. If we are silent, the evil will not crawl out of the dark and make our children think about sex, or abusing their children or being gay or racist or, or, or....
The sad fact of the matter is that while being proud of a new dress would not cause a fairy to put briars in your path, being too caught up in it might cause you to fail to notice an oncoming mud puddle that might have been easily side-stepped. The same goes for media with "objectionable content." Hopefully, the vast majority of us know that denigrating someone due to their skin colour or ancestry is wrong, but censoring materials where just this type of thing happens, and, depending on the historicity of the work, was perfectly acceptable, will not magically make racism go away. Pretending disease didn't exist failed to stop the Plague, pretending sex outside of marriage never happens won't prevent teenage hormones from rushing through the bloodstream, or protect someone from the potential consequences. Ignorance may be bliss, but it doesn't change the fundamental facts of the world. There must be understanding and communication, not an attempt to magic away anything we're uncomfortable with.
The irony of this is that in trying to censor many of the works about sex, homosexuality, the culture and/or belief systems of people "who are not like us," a type of folk magic is being practised by those who would swear they do no such thing. This is the same magic that makes us squirm under compliments and denigrate our abilities when someone else praises them, and whisper "cancer" or "aids" when we're talking about someone who is terminally ill. It's even the magic that leads to putting people into sterile hospital rooms and pretending they aren't dying when everyone, except possibly them, knows they are, but that's a discussion for another venue entirely.
A long-standing belief has been that if something isn't said out loud, it isn't real. This comes from not wanting the devil or fairies or whatever other evil tormented a community to hear something and make it bad or worse or real. The same thing goes when trying to take books from libraries that have content which frightens or offends us. If we are silent, the evil will not crawl out of the dark and make our children think about sex, or abusing their children or being gay or racist or, or, or....
The sad fact of the matter is that while being proud of a new dress would not cause a fairy to put briars in your path, being too caught up in it might cause you to fail to notice an oncoming mud puddle that might have been easily side-stepped. The same goes for media with "objectionable content." Hopefully, the vast majority of us know that denigrating someone due to their skin colour or ancestry is wrong, but censoring materials where just this type of thing happens, and, depending on the historicity of the work, was perfectly acceptable, will not magically make racism go away. Pretending disease didn't exist failed to stop the Plague, pretending sex outside of marriage never happens won't prevent teenage hormones from rushing through the bloodstream, or protect someone from the potential consequences. Ignorance may be bliss, but it doesn't change the fundamental facts of the world. There must be understanding and communication, not an attempt to magic away anything we're uncomfortable with.
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