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Banned Books Week 2024: Home

Banned Books Week

Libraries and Banned Books

"Libraries represent values that are core to democracy .... libraries across the country are addressing the effects of historical inequality and systemic racism on library users, especially people of color and those who belong to historically marginalized and minority communities. Library professionals are dedicated to developing collections that allow every person to see themselves in library resources and provide a means to build understanding among all users."

- Patty Wong, President of the American Library Association 2021-2022.  Quote taken from "A Librarian Wants to Challenge, Not Ban: [Letter]." New York Times, Mar 07, 2022.

 

Words Have Power

Some History on Banned Books Week

The following is from the American Libraries Magazine article 50 Years of Intellectual Freedom, written by OIF staff celebrating the office’s anniversary.

Banned Books Week was launched in the 1980s, a time of increased challenges, organized protests, and the Island Trees School District v. Pico (1982) Supreme Court case, which ruled that school officials can’t ban books in libraries simply because of their content.

Banned books were showcased at the 1982 American Booksellers Association (ABA) BookExpo America trade show in Anaheim, California. At the entrance to the convention center towered large, padlocked metal cages, with some 500 challenged books stacked inside and a large overhead sign cautioning that some people considered these books dangerous.

Drawing on the success of the exhibit, ABA invited OIF Director Judith Krug to join a new initiative called Banned Books Week, along with the National Association of College Stores. The three organizations scrambled to put something together by the September show date and ended up distributing a news release and a publicity kit, hoping that with their combined membership of 50,000 people, they could continue to spark a conversation about banned books.

The initiative took off. Institutions and stores hosted read-outs, and window displays morphed into literary graveyards or mysterious collections of brown-bagged books. Major news outlets such as PBS and the New York Times covered the event, and mayors and governors issued proclamations affirming the week.

ALA is currently part of a national coalition to promote Banned Books Week, along with 14 other contributors and sponsors. Krug led the Banned Books Week efforts as OIF director until her unexpected death in 2009. Her legacy lives on in the Freedom to Read Foundation’s Judith F. Krug Memorial Fund, a grant awarded to nonprofits to host Banned Books Week events.

Today, Banned Books Week coverage by mainstream media reaches an estimated 2.8 billion readers, and more than 90,000 publishing industry and library subscribers. The Banned Books page remains one of the top two most popular pages on the ALA website.

From: Banned & Challenged Books: A Website of the ALA Office of Intellectual Freedom

For more information on banned books, please check out the ALA's Banned Book FAQ.

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Books Unite Us

MCCC Banned Books Display 2022

About this Guide

This guide is based on A Decade of Banned Books LibGuide originally created by Kyle Crossan, a graduate student at Drexel's College of Computing & Informatics and a future librarian, in 2021. Updates, changes, and additions were made in Fall 2022 by IRSC Libraries and MCCC Libraries.