Book of the Day

As we push towards Banned Book Week Awareness, it is only right that I point at a book that has a real chance of provocation.  Lynching to Belong: Claiming Whiteness Towards Racial Violence is such a book.  Written by a Texas historian, Cynthia Skove Novels, this looks at how a group of immigrants in post-Civil-War Texas associated themselves with the culture of lynching in order to assert where they belonged socially.  The awful effects of a society whose value has shifted to hate and violence has the potential to upset, provoke, and insight outrage, but perhaps this is where librarians end up on the battlefield. Of course, this book hasn’t been banned, or attempted to be banned, but maybe you can see where one might think banning it is a good idea.

Yes: The content of this book should upset you.  It should upset you because it happened.  But how do you learn from history if you ban the accounts from accessibility?  Don’t hate the book, hate that it had to be written.  By better understanding the value racial identity holds in this country, and by also seeing the difficulties immigrants have, do, and will face when becoming members of the United States, one can perhaps gain insight into a solution to this disgusting social tendency to find such an alliance.  And if we’re lucky, future generations can prevent such set-ups from perpetuating.

Book of the Day

It is pretty much self-promotion that gets libraries posting on blogs, and our “Book of the Day” can be seen as self-promotion for our collection.  This week’s book goes beyond that to an overall Library Mission promotion.  Banned Books: 2007 resource book, put together by Robert P. Doyle, highlights battles libraries have had to defend over time.  The pattern is often this:

  • User finds a book offensive.
  • User rallies community members.
  • Librarian defends the book.
  • User remains outraged.
  • Book gets taken off shelf.
  • User celebrates, and immediately forgets the problem.
  • 2 months later, the book is back on the shelf.
  • No one cares.

But what is interesting about this is the reason a lot of these books have been put away, and the make-up of the communities that ban them.  The information for each known ban is listed.

If you’d like to see it, come down to the Reference Desk, where it is on special display for the time being!