Erased: The Battle Over Banned Books in America

Par : James W. Harper
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231977109
  • EAN9798231977109
  • Date de parution23/04/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

In classrooms, libraries, and communities across America, a war is being waged-not with weapons but with censorship. Books are being challenged, banned, and pulled from shelves at an alarming rate. But this isn't just about books-it's about power, control, and whose stories get to be told. Erased: The Battle Over Banned Books in America dives deep into the rising movement to suppress ideas and restrict access to literature.
Through powerful first-person accounts and expert analysis, the book explores the issue from every angle: the librarians fighting to keep shelves full, the teachers navigating fear and policy, the students devastated by the removal of identity-affirming stories, and the adults torn between safety and freedom. It also exposes the political agendas fueling this cultural battle. Drawing parallels to historical moments of literary censorship-from Nazi Germany and McCarthyism to modern-day authoritarian regimes-Erased makes a compelling case for why this trend is so dangerous, and how it echoes some of history's darkest chapters.
But this book isn't just about warning-it's about action. With a roadmap of resistance strategies, resources, and ways individuals can make a difference, Erased is a timely and urgent guide for defending the freedom to read, think, and imagine.
In classrooms, libraries, and communities across America, a war is being waged-not with weapons but with censorship. Books are being challenged, banned, and pulled from shelves at an alarming rate. But this isn't just about books-it's about power, control, and whose stories get to be told. Erased: The Battle Over Banned Books in America dives deep into the rising movement to suppress ideas and restrict access to literature.
Through powerful first-person accounts and expert analysis, the book explores the issue from every angle: the librarians fighting to keep shelves full, the teachers navigating fear and policy, the students devastated by the removal of identity-affirming stories, and the adults torn between safety and freedom. It also exposes the political agendas fueling this cultural battle. Drawing parallels to historical moments of literary censorship-from Nazi Germany and McCarthyism to modern-day authoritarian regimes-Erased makes a compelling case for why this trend is so dangerous, and how it echoes some of history's darkest chapters.
But this book isn't just about warning-it's about action. With a roadmap of resistance strategies, resources, and ways individuals can make a difference, Erased is a timely and urgent guide for defending the freedom to read, think, and imagine.