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{"id":234,"date":"2016-05-14T16:27:15","date_gmt":"2016-05-14T16:27:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/elizabethgrab.com\/?p=234"},"modified":"2018-03-20T18:55:20","modified_gmt":"2018-03-20T22:55:20","slug":"the-absolutely-true-diary-of-a-part-time-indian-a-defense","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/elizabethgrab.com\/library-science\/the-absolutely-true-diary-of-a-part-time-indian-a-defense\/","title":{"rendered":"The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian: A Defense"},"content":{"rendered":"

For a class on collections management in the Fall semester, Mary Grace Flaherty asked us to select a banned book to evaluate for it’s retention or elimination from a collection.\u00a0 I chose The Absolutely True Diary of A Part-Time Indian<\/em> by Sherman Alexie.<\/p>\n


\n

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian<\/em>: A Defense<\/strong><\/h2>\n

<\/p>\n

Introduction<\/em><\/h4>\n

Books, particularly those written for young adults, are challenged regularly and banned with frequency in the United States. According to the American Library Association\u2019s Intellectual Freedom and Public Information Offices \u201cup to 85% of book challenges receive no media attention and remain unreported.\u201d[1] <\/a>2014 saw 311 challenges reported. If we include the estimated 85% of unreported challenges, the number increases to roughly 575 books challenged in one year. Of the 311 reported challenges, 80% of them included \u2018diverse\u2019 material.[2]<\/a> The Intellectual Freedom and Public Information Offices define \u2018diverse\u2019 according to Malinda Lo: \u201cnon-white main and\/or secondary characters; LGBT main and\/or secondary characters; disabled main and\/or secondary characters; issues about race or racism; LGBT issues; issues about religion, which encompass in this situation the Holocaust and terrorism; issues about disability and\/or mental illness; non-Western settings, in which the West is North America and Europe.\u201d[3]<\/a><\/p>\n

With all of these statistics in mind, it\u2019s no wonder that Sherman Alexie\u2019s young adult novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian<\/em>, published in 2007, tops the 2014 list of the ten most challenged books. The main character, Junior, self-identifies as a poor, lisping, stuttering, physically- and socially-awkward, Native American brown kid that lives on a reservation and gets beat up regularly, with brain damage, seizures, alcoholic parents and a shut-in sister.[4] <\/a>Because of how Junior navigates all of these challenges and more, this story represents one of the most important young adult books produced in the past decade. It is our duty\u2014firstly as citizens and secondly as librarians\u2014to defend young adult books with diverse characters like Alexie\u2019s main character from well-meaning, misinformed censors.<\/p>\n

The Complaints<\/em><\/h4>\n

According to the ALA\u2019s website, the primary objections brought against The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian<\/em> include \u201canti-family, cultural insensitivity, drugs\/alcohol\/smoking, gambling, offensive language, sex education, sexually explicit, unsuited for age group, and violence\u201d with \u201cdepictions of bullying\u201d thrown in for good measure. Sherman Alexie, in his Wall Street Journal response to naysayers, adds depravity, \u201cdomestic violence, drug abuse, racism, poverty, sexuality, and murder,\u201d to the list of \u2018objectionable material\u2019.[5]<\/a> Not only does Junior encompass nearly every aspect of diversity, he also experiences nearly every aspect of subject matter thought inappropriate for young adults.[6]<\/a><\/p>\n

At Antioch High School, in a suburb of Chicago, for example, seven parents came before the school board requesting Alexie\u2019s book be removed from the summer reading list, the curriculum, and the library unless accompanied by a warning label \u201cbecause it uses foul, racist language and describes sexual acts.\u201d[7] <\/a>Mother Jennifer Andersen read the book to help her son understand it and proceeded to cross out passage after passage that she felt was inappropriate for any high school freshman.[8]<\/a> She also commented that while she knows that kids curse, if books with profanity are included in the curriculum, “the students will believe the school condones it.\u201d[9]<\/a><\/p>\n

Why the Censors Are Just Plain Wrong<\/em><\/h4>\n

Before breaking down why the objections to The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian<\/em>\u00a0represent the very same reasons why it should be required reading for every middle- and high-schooler, it behooves my argument to include the many accolades awarded to Alexie\u2019s book by widely recognized and respected authorities on literature:<\/p>\n