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Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Free Program Alert: Safeguarding Intellectual Freedom: How to Counter Censorship and the Criminalization of Librarianship in America

One week from today, the University of Maryland Libraries are hosting a free program with the above titles. I have copied the press release from their website below. You can click here for that information or just skip to the free Zoom registration

This program directly addresses the "criminalization" of librarianship, a topic we need to speak more directly and openly about. I have signed up. Hope you can make it too.

UMD Libraries to Host Virtual Panel on Intellectual Freedom

Experts will discuss countering censorship and the criminalization of librarianship in America on Tuesday, August 29, 2023

The University of Maryland Libraries will host a virtual dialogue on Tuesday, August 29, 2023, from 3:00-4:30 pm ET, to explore actions that can be taken to ensure libraries remain bastions of intellectual freedom for all.

American librarians are increasingly becoming the latest targets in the political and cultural wars spreading across the country, part of a growing movement to ban books, censor ideas, and restrict educators’ ability to discuss race, gender, identity, and LGBTQ+ issues in the classroom.

Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid's Tale, Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, Juno Dawson’s This Book is Gay, and Ta-Nehisi Coates' Between the World and Me, have all landed on recent censorship lists in 2022 alone, which the American Library Association (ALA) reports was a year that saw the “highest number of attempted book bans since ALA began compiling data about censorship in libraries more than 20 years ago.”

How can freedom-to-read advocates and community members respond to counter these divisive strategies and rhetoric which portray libraries as spaces of indoctrination and librarians as villains peddling harmful literature?

These questions and other timely topics will be addressed in a panel discussion moderated by Lae’l Hughes-Watkins, Associate Director of Special Collections and University Archives for Engagement Inclusion, and Reparative Archiving, with the following panelists:   
  • Emily Drabinski, President, American Library Association, and academic librarian and author
  • Dr. Paul T. Jaeger, Professor and Distinguished Scholar-Teacher, UMD College of Information Studies, Director of the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture graduate program, and Associate Director of the Maryland Initiative for Digital Accessibility
  • Dr. Emily Knox, Associate Professor, School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and author of Book Banning in 21st Century America (Rowman & Littlefield) and co-editor of Foundations of Information Ethics (ALA Neal-Schuman)
  • Felton Thomas, Jr., Executive Director of Cleveland Public Library (CPL), who has furthered the mission of CPL to be “The People’s University”, including launching initiatives aimed at addressing community needs in the areas of access to technology, education, and economic development.

Inspired by recent scholarship, such as The Urge to Censor: Raw Power, Social Control, and the Criminalization of Librarianship  (Paul T. Jaeger et al), and motivated by the turmoil facing ALA, with censorship proponents calling for conservative states to end their memberships in ALA, the University of Maryland Libraries invites you to register for this free webinar, offered as part of the Libraries’ Living Democracy Initiative.

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