It’s Not About the Books: Goals (and Costs) of the Pro-Censorship Movement 

De-Normalizing Censorship Speaker Series
Albert S. Cook Library, Towson University

Censorship is often framed as a good faith debate in response to controversial books, rather than a political tool that both silences minoritized voices and lays the groundwork for controlling public institutions. The current pro-censorship movement has launched a well-coordinated national campaign to destabilize public schools, universities and libraries. Even if the current wave of challenges subsides, states are codifying the aims of this movement into laws and rolling back hard-won curricular progress at all levels of education. In this three-part series, hear from scholars, educators, and advocates who are working to turn the tide, in part by re-thinking how we can all respond more effectively to these attacks on our democracy.  April 13th; April 18th; April 27 – (all 5pm, all virtual) Click HERE for full schedule.

It’s Not About the Books: Goals (and Costs) of the Pro-Censorship Movement  
Speaker: Allison Jennings-Roche, Towson University Library Instruction Coordinator and University of Maryland PhD student in Information Studies  

Allison Jennings-Roche’s research offers perspective on the current censorship movement, placing it within historical trends and examining the ways in which the rhetoric of censorship operates, what’s at stake when censorship is normalized and the ways in which libraries, librarians, and their supporters can work to counteract and delegitimize this rhetoric.   

April 13, 2023, 5-6pm, Virtual  

Registration Required. Click HERE to register.

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This post was written by Baker, Cynthia M.