Banned books, disinformation, and how public libraries are the solution | Opinion – Tennessean

Posted: September 24, 2021 at 10:37 am

In the U.S. 78% of citizens trust the public library as the place to find reliable, fact-based information, as opposed to lower trust for mass media and elected officials.

Kent Oliver| Guest Columnist

Tennessee Voices: Kent Oliver

Opinion and Engagement Director David Plazas spoke with Nashville Public Library Director Kent Oliver.

David Plazas, USA TODAY NETWORK Tennessee

Challenges against books are nothing new, and theyre the reason why libraries and their communities are once again celebrating your right to read by observing Banned Books Week, Sept.26-Oct.2.

Books and authors have always been targeted for censorship and/or being cancelled. This is because of opposition to content along religious, moral, and other grounds, as well as mistrust in the other side.

These actions stand in direct contrast to the rights outlined in both the First Amendment and libraries fundamental belief in the American Library Associations (ALA) Library Bill of Rights.

From 2015 through 2020, the ALA tracked 1,832 formal challenges against more than 1,700 books. Some of the most common topics that were challenged include:

Somehow, this years observance seems more significant than ever.

Weve seen the anti-expression stance expand the past few years into the disinformation wars, in which our government, private companies (including social media and Big Tech groups), the mass media, and individual citizens are engaging each other not to discuss, but to discredit and silence.

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Whether its climate change supporters vs. skeptics, Democrats vs. Republicans, liberals vs. conservatives, or vaccination vs. anti-vaccination, we are admittedly so polarized that reasonable and fact-based discussion seems all but lost to us.

Banned Books Weeks celebrates our differences and reminds us that public libraries are part of the solution.

In addition to being non-partisan, libraries are gateways to accessing reliable, accurate information. We identify and vet sources carefully; provide a wide array of materials on different topics; present diverse and alternate viewpoints; and provide access equally, regardless of economic, social, gender or racial status.

As a result, in 2017, Pew Research Center reported that 78% of Americans trust the public library as the place to find reliable, fact-based information. This contrasts with a recent Gallup poll indicating about 40% of us trust mass media. Pew also found that only 24% of Americans trust our elected officials to do the right thing. And, in addition, this distrust extends to non-political matters such as information on the economy, social justice and basic facts.

One way we can both stop these challenges against intellectual freedom in books and literature and reverse the disinformation wars that plague our society is to reestablish equitable civil discourse.

To do that, we need resilient forums where people can connect and engage each other without fear or prejudice, where reliable information is close at hand, and where individuals may come to agreement or respectfully disagree.

Your public libraries are the perfect place to start. We cant wait to see you!

Kent Oliver is the director of the Nashville Public Library.

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Banned books, disinformation, and how public libraries are the solution | Opinion - Tennessean

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