Recently, I found out that my work is mentioned in a book that has
been banned, in effect, from the schools in Tucson, Arizona. The
anti-ethnic studies law passed by the state prohibits teachings that
"promote the overthrow of the United States government," "promote
resentment toward a race or class of people," "are designed primarily
for pupils of a particular ethnic group," and/or "advocate ethnic
solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals." I invite
you to read the book in question, titled Critical Race Theory: An Introduction, so that you can decide for yourselves whether it qualifies.
In fact, I invite you to take on as your summer reading the
astonishingly lengthy list of books that have been removed from the
Tucson public school system as part of this wholesale elimination of the
Mexican-American studies curriculum. The authors and editors include
Isabel Allende, Junot Díaz, Jonathan Kozol, Rudolfo Anaya, bell hooks,
Sandra Cisneros, James Baldwin, Howard Zinn, Rodolfo Acuña, Ronald
Takaki, Jerome Skolnick and Gloria Anzaldúa. Even Thoreau's Civil
Disobedience and Shakespeare's The Tempest received the hatchet.
No comments:
Post a Comment