censorship


The Gatekeepers

My previous post about The Cool Kids reminded me of the panel I organized for REFORMA’s National Conference in September. The panel consisted of the only 3 y.a. writers that I am aware of who have ever had a published young adult novel set in El Paso, Texas–J.L. Powers (me), Benjamin Alire Saenz, and Claudia Guadalupe Martinez; more depressing still, or perhaps more exhilarating still if you want to be unique, we are among only a handful-and-a-half of y.a. writers who have set our novels on the U.S.-Mexico Border. We were discussing why there are so few novels for teenagers that are set on the peripheries of our nation. Now, by peripheries, I don’t mean necessarily the borders, because teenagers in Minnesota are still growing up in mainstream society, whereas teenagers in El Paso are definitely not!

Benjamin Alire Saenz began to get quite excited as he discussed how the gatekeepers in the book world–agents, editors, publishers, and then librarians, teachers, and booksellers–have ghettoized literature about latinos set in a predominantly latino world such as El Paso. He mentioned how one of his books received a review that said something like “even though Saenz’s novel is set in El Paso, its themes resonate with the human condition, with things people everywhere grapple with.” (I’m paraphrasing.) Ben wanted to know why nobody ever writes a book review that says “even though so-and-so’s novel is set in New York, its themes resonate…etc. etc.” Ben sure knows how to stick it to The Man! I love the fact that he has remained faithful to his values, of writing about Latinos, of writing about El Paso, from El Paso. That fame and fortune aren’t why he writes.

I’m still young enough that fame and fortune seem elusively tantalizing. But when I really reflect on it, it’s nice not to be completely in the limelight. I remember remarking to Sara Zarr once that I wished my books sold as well as hers, and got as many reviews as hers, and she just said, “Careful what you wish for.” Touche!

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Another Censorship Letter

In a letter to a high school student who is concerned that parents are trying to censor two of Pat Conroy’s books in West Virginia, Pat Conroy delivered a few quotable lines that I love:

 ”I have yet to meet an English teacher who assigned a book [in order to] to damage a kid….I loathe it when they are bullied by know-nothing parents or cowardly school boards.”

“People cuss in my books. People cuss in my real life. I cuss, especially at Citadel basketball games.”

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Free Speech/Anti-Immigration: Mackenzie Malone is in the news

While I find this student’s editorial abhorrent, I do stand behind his right to write it and, if published, not be bullied or attacked, as he claims he was. Further, I agree with the court’s ruling that “upheld a high school journalist’s right to write an anti-immigrant editorial and affirmed California’s strong legal protections for students’ free speech.” The school chose to publish his editorial in the first place and then it revoked the remaining issues of the paper when it received complaints.  Read More

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AS-IF reports

AS-IF reports on the Cathedral High School cancellation.

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Former Judge FINALLY speaks

Here’s the editorial that former Chief Justice Richard Barajas wrote, published in the El Paso Times today.

Apparently, if you create characters who behave in ways that everybody knows is unacceptable, you are actually promoting it as a value–even if those same characters repent of their actions! So I’m apparently promoting values of murder, mayhem, and blatent, wanton racism. 

And since the book definitely explores themes of redemption and taking personal responsibility for your actions, I guess he would say that those are not values that Cathedral would espouse? Full text of the editorial occurs below. Read More

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Newspaper Tree & EP Times

An article about the cancellation of the Cathedral High School event has been published in Newspaper Tree…..More later….

EP Times also did an article on it. I think The Newspaper Tree article was more balanced in its reporting. Oh, well.

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