A brief personal narrative published in the West Virginia Library Association Newsletter recounting a first-hand childhood experience with banned books and how it informed a librarian\u27s interest in neutrality and inclusion in libraries. Among the protests and boycotts, schools were bombed and dynamited, houses were stoned, and school buses were shot at
This paper examines the censorship of school library _books and school textbooks in American public....
In 1998, a group of adult library patrons and individuals in Loudoun County, Virginia, brought a sui...
Despite past lessons, book-banning continues to exist at all levels within our democratic society. T...
Within the last decade, librarians and educators have reported alarming increases in the number of c...
Just as Mississippi whites in the 1950s and 1960s had fought to maintain school segregation, they ba...
At a time of new controversy over reading material used in Mississippi public schools, Charles W. Ea...
This study was undertaken to learn about public librarians’ attitudes and opinions concerning the so...
Censorship of school books and other materials has long been an issue in the United States. North Da...
About 60 people arrived to discuss the fate of Sherman Alexie\u27s Part-Time Indian book in Crook ...
Silent, No More explores the 1974 Kanawha County textbook controversy, and places it within the cont...
The West Linn-Wilsonville School District decided to retain Jumper in high school and middle schoo...
A revision of the author's thesis (M.A.), George Washington University.Includes bibliographical refe...
In 1953, Mary Knowles was fired as a branch librarian for the Morrill Memorial Library, a public lib...
In 1974 the proposal and adoption of new language arts textbooks, that sought to emphasize themes of...
The main purpose of this study was to identify and describe incidents of censorship which occurred w...
This paper examines the censorship of school library _books and school textbooks in American public....
In 1998, a group of adult library patrons and individuals in Loudoun County, Virginia, brought a sui...
Despite past lessons, book-banning continues to exist at all levels within our democratic society. T...
Within the last decade, librarians and educators have reported alarming increases in the number of c...
Just as Mississippi whites in the 1950s and 1960s had fought to maintain school segregation, they ba...
At a time of new controversy over reading material used in Mississippi public schools, Charles W. Ea...
This study was undertaken to learn about public librarians’ attitudes and opinions concerning the so...
Censorship of school books and other materials has long been an issue in the United States. North Da...
About 60 people arrived to discuss the fate of Sherman Alexie\u27s Part-Time Indian book in Crook ...
Silent, No More explores the 1974 Kanawha County textbook controversy, and places it within the cont...
The West Linn-Wilsonville School District decided to retain Jumper in high school and middle schoo...
A revision of the author's thesis (M.A.), George Washington University.Includes bibliographical refe...
In 1953, Mary Knowles was fired as a branch librarian for the Morrill Memorial Library, a public lib...
In 1974 the proposal and adoption of new language arts textbooks, that sought to emphasize themes of...
The main purpose of this study was to identify and describe incidents of censorship which occurred w...
This paper examines the censorship of school library _books and school textbooks in American public....
In 1998, a group of adult library patrons and individuals in Loudoun County, Virginia, brought a sui...
Despite past lessons, book-banning continues to exist at all levels within our democratic society. T...