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YA Authors Support Intellectual Freedom "As If!"
October 03, 2007
In
a stand against censorship, approximately 80 Young Adult authors are members
of As If! (Authors Supporting
Intellectual Freedom), a blog chronicling challenges to YA books around the
country. Author members include M.T. Anderson, Meg Cabot, Cynthia Kadohata,
Gregory McGuire, and Lisa Yee.
"There are a lot of people in this country who are really sick of censorship,"
said As If! founding member and YA author Jordan Sonnenblick. "I think
the trend towards attacking schools and libraries is a disturbing facet of the
general erosion of our civil rights, and our citizens are looking for rallying
points from which they can fight back."
The blog was launched in 2005 when the board of trustees at Austin, Texas'
St. Andrew's Episcopal School stood on principle and rejected a $3 million gift
because the donor, film producer Cary McNair, requested that Annie Proulx's
Brokeback Mountain be removed from the optional reading list for high
school students.
YA author Brent Hartinger, another founding member, explained, "[The]
specific catalyst for As If! was the events at St. Andrews, but the truth is,
a group of us teen lit authors had been informally discussing censorship issues
for years, on an online e-mail list. Once it became clear that there was something
that we, as authors, could do, we quickly sprang into action."
Although the group's members hold similar attitudes about censorship, Hartinger
stressed they were a diverse population. "We come from all different geographic
areas, and different religious and political points of view. Many of us are
parents ourselves (a few of us might even be called 'overprotective parents!'),"
he said. "We're not necessarily what some people expect in an anticensorship
group. But what unites us is the fundamental idea that, ultimately, knowledge
is power, that dialogue and debate are good things, and that literature and
its points of access must remain free and unfettered. If there is a difficult
issue to be decided, it's generally best to let individuals and individual families
decide for themselves, rather than let an individual or group decide for everyone
else."
The group's web presence includes blogs on Blogger, MySpace, and LiveJournal,
as well as individual author blogs, where members look to educate people about
specific book challenges and the greater issues involved. "We speak out
as individuals on behalf of As If! at conferences and individual events, talking
about censorship issues in keynote addresses or informational sessions,"
said Hartinger. "[And] we work behind-the-scenes with specific librarians
and/or educators on specific book challenges."
As If! serves as a central information point for challenges to YA books. It
includes lists of Banned Book Events, links, and posts about challenges. "Any
time we hear about a book challenge, especially if it's complicated or if the
censors seem to be winning, we blog about it," said Sonnenblick. "If
there seems to be an opportunity to influence events on the ground, we sometimes
coordinate e-mail campaigns. More often, I call or e-mail principals, school
boards, superintendents, and local media wherever the censorship is occurring."
Posters to the blog often include authors responding to news about challenges
to their own books. Ellen Wittlinger's Sandpiper (Simon Pulse) was recently
challenged by an Alabama teenager, who, with the support of her grandmother,
refused to return the book to the school library because she believed it was
too sexually explicit. Wittlinger said on the blog, "I know that there
are people in this country who, in the name of religion, feel high school students
should be kept as ignorant of sex as possible, but I was shocked that the girl
herself was equally afraid of knowledge."
Hartinger summed up the collective attitude of the YA authors who participate
in As If!: "You might say that, as authors, we have a vested interest in
keeping books on the shelves and, of course, we do. But we see ourselves as
being in a unique position, because not only do we create the books that get
some folks upset (and, as a result, we know exactly why we write the books we
write, and how to defend them), but we also see firsthand the impact that our
books have on actual readers.... We all take our responsibility as writers of
fiction for young people very seriously. But we also believe that authenticity
and verisimilitude are the hallmarks of good, engaging fiction."
For the record, he added, "We also believe that most Americans agree with
us, and that those who would ban or restrict access to books are a minority
-- a vocal one, but a minority nonetheless." --Karen
Schechner
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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