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Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. Novo Send a noteboard - 06/02/2010 01:44:07 PM
The article got me thinking about censorship of books and the dissemination of ideas, which led me to think about books that are affirmatively chosen for mandatory reading in schools as well. This train of thought was broken by a desire to have breakfast, but when I returned to it I decided to post a survey here.

1. Are there any books that should ever be censored? If so, why? If so, which ones? Who should decide what books are censored and for whom?


Censorship is ridiculous.

2. Should any books be withheld from libraries in high schools? If so, why? If so, which ones? Who should decide what books are withheld?


I don't think so. The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold was banned from a local middle school, for instance, because of inappropriate content.
While it may not be necessary for middle-school students to be exposed to thematic elements such as rape and murder, neither should they be sheltered from it. There is a wide range of maturity in students, particularly in middle-school, and many people are ready for books that their peers may not be.

It should be up for students to decide on an individual basis what is or isn't appropriate for them to read.

3. Name five books (aside from religious works) that you think have had a massive impact on the world, and at least one that is frequently overlooked on lists of that sort.

4. Do you think any of the books you listed in point 3 should be read in schools as mandatory reading? Why or why not?

5. Name five books (aside from religious works) that you think SHOULD be mandatory reading in schools (or at least "on the curriculum" if you don't like the word "mandatory"), and why.


I think that substantially more "classics" should be taught in schools, especially in highschools. I read portions of The Iliad and the entirety of The Odyssey last year. We had a extremely knowledgeable and enthusiastic teacher and spent the better part of two months analyzing and discussing it in depth, and I got so much more out of it than I would have if I had picked it up on my own. Whereas required reading such as The Catcher in the Rye or A Raisin in the Sun I can fully comprehend and appreciate with much less instruction. While it's good that these books are covered by the curriculum class time should not necessarily be lavished upon them.

How well you appreciate the books you have to read in highschool also largely depends on how well you are taught. If you have a lousy teacher, you won't get everything you can out of a challenging book.


6. Do you think schools are too careful in choosing books due to pressure from those who would censor the curriculum? If so, which sorts of books do you feel are unjustly censored?

7. Do you think schools place too much emphasis on particular themes or ideas when choosing their curriculum? If so, which ones?


There's a heavy American bias towards a majority of our required reading and it would be interesting to be exposed to different cultural perspectives, both ancient and modern.

8. Are there any authors you would remove from school curricula who are presently well-represented? Why?


Over the course of four years we read six Shakespeare plays. And while Shakespeare is Shakespeare there are so many other good books out there that should be read that it seems like overkill.

9. Are there any authors not represented that you would like to see added generally? Why?


The neglected pool of science fiction that is also literature. Also classics, and more-postmodern stuff.

10. Is there ONE book (aside from religious works) that you think EVERYONE should read? If so, what book and why?
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Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 05:15:17 PM 1366 Views
Interesting post - 05/02/2010 06:19:06 PM 873 Views
I agree. One Shakespeare is sufficient. *NM* - 06/02/2010 06:42:51 AM 323 Views
Oh, fun! You mentioned the 语录 by Chairman Mao... - 06/02/2010 06:35:21 PM 781 Views
Tough Subject, censorship - 05/02/2010 07:24:39 PM 904 Views
tough questions - 05/02/2010 08:26:30 PM 846 Views
I never saw the humour in Dilbert... - 06/02/2010 06:28:57 PM 867 Views
I actually ran into this in high school. - 05/02/2010 08:33:10 PM 1020 Views
I found that we covered a lot about American Indian issues in US History. - 06/02/2010 06:23:16 PM 800 Views
we coverd most of those things as well - 06/02/2010 08:08:22 PM 950 Views
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I think jane austen and the brontes would be good to leave in - 06/02/2010 03:44:10 AM 704 Views
They could read Pride & Prejudice & Zombies instead. *NM* - 06/02/2010 04:03:34 PM 315 Views
They could. It'd be very educational. - 06/02/2010 04:37:23 PM 673 Views
What about... - 18/02/2010 06:57:56 PM 1076 Views
Hmm. - 05/02/2010 09:11:13 PM 853 Views
Love the survey. - 05/02/2010 09:42:29 PM 966 Views
Interesting. Do you really think that Nineteen Eighty-Four is plausible? - 06/02/2010 10:13:56 AM 815 Views
It doesn't have to be plausible as a whole to be relevant. - 06/02/2010 08:28:20 PM 814 Views
I agree entirely - 06/02/2010 10:32:07 PM 890 Views
You raise an interesting point. - 06/02/2010 06:06:20 PM 802 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 11:09:41 PM 939 Views
Nietzsche as mandatory reading - that's a fun idea. - 06/02/2010 06:00:29 PM 887 Views
Re: Nietzsche as mandatory reading - that's a fun idea. - 06/02/2010 06:03:59 PM 862 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 11:47:08 PM 931 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 06/02/2010 12:11:06 AM 806 Views
I agree with most of that. But to quote our eminent Camilla... - 06/02/2010 10:30:15 AM 912 Views
I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below). - 06/02/2010 05:54:50 PM 808 Views
Re: I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below). - 06/02/2010 06:05:48 PM 916 Views
I don't think high school students need to discuss possibilities for staging. - 07/02/2010 01:36:03 AM 759 Views
I think there is value to discussing staging - 07/02/2010 01:52:47 AM 763 Views
nice post - 06/02/2010 01:27:23 AM 783 Views
Re: nice post - 06/02/2010 01:29:34 AM 797 Views
A lot of people think von Clausewitz is important. - 06/02/2010 05:51:44 PM 719 Views
More than Sun Tzu? *NM* - 06/02/2010 08:31:44 PM 300 Views
Sun Zi was relatively unknown in the West until recently. - 07/02/2010 01:30:06 AM 775 Views
Sure, but he could still have influenced world history by influencing Asia... *NM* - 07/02/2010 01:35:17 AM 327 Views
Doubtful. - 07/02/2010 01:41:01 AM 785 Views
Tom, you did not just write that - 07/02/2010 10:12:40 AM 823 Views
The Mongols are not East Asian. They are Central Asian. - 07/02/2010 03:06:19 PM 805 Views
Neat. - 06/02/2010 06:41:37 AM 1045 Views
Brave New World is an excellent choice. - 06/02/2010 05:15:15 PM 734 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 06/02/2010 01:44:07 PM 905 Views
I agree that Shakespeare is over-emphasised. - 06/02/2010 04:29:16 PM 673 Views
Before responding to others, I'll post my own responses - 06/02/2010 04:26:53 PM 933 Views
Re: Before responding to others, I'll post my own responses - 06/02/2010 10:34:10 PM 753 Views
Hmm. - 06/02/2010 11:33:02 PM 816 Views
New Zealand has culture? - 07/02/2010 03:25:28 PM 977 Views
Which book of his would you recommend ? - 09/02/2010 04:20:15 PM 765 Views
The Whale Rider is lovely. - 10/02/2010 02:36:01 PM 678 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 07/02/2010 11:52:02 PM 845 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 08/02/2010 03:14:24 AM 1030 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 11/02/2010 10:58:23 PM 909 Views

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