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Banned! The 20 (most banned) books they didn't want you to read
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/aug/23/banned-the-20-books-they-didnt-want-you-to-readPublic book burnings by Nazis or McCarthyites, too, might be assumed to be nothing more than a baleful warning from the past. Yet the burning of books still appears an irresistible act to some even in the country with the strongest statutory protection of free speech, the United States. In 2019, students at Georgia Southern University burned copies of visiting Cuban-American author Jennine Capó Crucets Make Your Home Among Strangers, some shouting Trump 2020!. In 2022, the Nashville pastor Greg Locke held a public bonfire for demonic books, including the Harry Potter and Twilight series.
Censorship used to occur largely at the level of governments or other transnational authorities. It still does in authoritarian countries such as Iran and China, but western states generally liberalised in the mid-20th century. Yet a weaker form of censorship has long persisted within the American school system, where individual books are subject to challenge by parents who consider them inappropriate material for their children. Often, school boards will respond by removing those books from school libraries, in which case they have effectively been banned.
The phenomenon has accelerated in recent years. The machinery of school censorship in the US has also become significantly more corporate. According to the American Library Associations analysis of its 2024 data, the majority of book censorship attempts are now originating from organised movements. Pressure groups and government entities that include elected officials, board members and administrators initiated 72% of demands to censor books in school and public libraries. Between 2001 and 2020, such groups challenged an average of 46 titles per year. Last year, they challenged 4,190 titles in 12 months.
Donald Trumps crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programmes in schools and universities has led some school districts in Texas and Florida to proactively remove shelf-fulls of potential offenders within the last 12 months. Earlier this year, meanwhile, a man went into a public library in Ohio, checked out a number of books on Jewish, Black and LGBTQ+ history, and burned them all. The caption to a video of the bonfire read: We are cleansing our libraries of degenerate filth. Joseph Goebbels would have approved.
Censorship used to occur largely at the level of governments or other transnational authorities. It still does in authoritarian countries such as Iran and China, but western states generally liberalised in the mid-20th century. Yet a weaker form of censorship has long persisted within the American school system, where individual books are subject to challenge by parents who consider them inappropriate material for their children. Often, school boards will respond by removing those books from school libraries, in which case they have effectively been banned.
The phenomenon has accelerated in recent years. The machinery of school censorship in the US has also become significantly more corporate. According to the American Library Associations analysis of its 2024 data, the majority of book censorship attempts are now originating from organised movements. Pressure groups and government entities that include elected officials, board members and administrators initiated 72% of demands to censor books in school and public libraries. Between 2001 and 2020, such groups challenged an average of 46 titles per year. Last year, they challenged 4,190 titles in 12 months.
Donald Trumps crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programmes in schools and universities has led some school districts in Texas and Florida to proactively remove shelf-fulls of potential offenders within the last 12 months. Earlier this year, meanwhile, a man went into a public library in Ohio, checked out a number of books on Jewish, Black and LGBTQ+ history, and burned them all. The caption to a video of the bonfire read: We are cleansing our libraries of degenerate filth. Joseph Goebbels would have approved.
Enjoy the degenerate filth listed below.
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/aug/23/banned-the-20-books-they-didnt-want-you-to-read
One suspects that DJT ❤️ Lolita.
Note: looked for a forum for arts, literature or writing. This seemed best.
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Banned! The 20 (most banned) books they didn't want you to read (Original Post)
usonian
Aug 23
OP
AllaN01Bear
(27,373 posts)1. hem.
kimbutgar
(25,985 posts)2. I have some of these books
And when I do my senior move job I have come across some of these titles that clients donate because they dont have room for so many books. I will bring some home to pass on.
mwmisses4289
(2,157 posts)3. Some of these should be banned simply
because they are some of the most boring books ever written. However, that is simply my opinion, and other readers will find these titles and subjects worth reading.
intheflow
(29,698 posts)4. I've read 9, and of those, own 6.
Trump never read Lolita, except maybe the dirty parts while in high school, but doubtful, given his general seeming illiteracy.