A Conflict between Religious Extremism and Intellectual Freedom at Ground Zero
- Lacie Sutherland (L&K Ventures, LLC)
Abstract
Religious extremism, mostly in the form of Christian Nationalism, is the catalyst fueling the book banning engine currently steamrolling across school and public libraries in America. In Alabama, one public library became Ground Zero in March of 2023 that eventually bled into a statewide war fought primarily in school and library boards, city council and county commissions, the state library board, some churches, and in every branch of the government. Ground Zero is in reference to the Autauga-Prattville Public Library (APPL) of Autauga County, Alabama. The fight continues to this day, and those who were on the frontlines at Ground Zero and beyond, the librarians, were soon joined by local grassroot nonprofits against the hate groups perpetrating the waves of book bans across the state. This article is a peer-reviewed analysis that frequently sources a local journalist from the Alabama Political Reporter (APR), amongst other new sites and organizations. The arguments either for or against book bans are in reference to many books published either by or for LGBTQIA+ youth and people of color and describe the length to which religious extremists will deem anything related to these communities as “inappropriate”.
Keywords: book bans, censorship, grassroot nonprofits, hate groups, religious extremism, public and school libraries, library boards, city council and county commission meetings, intellectual freedom, funding/defunding policies, state library associations
How to Cite:
Sutherland, L., (2024) “ A Conflict between Religious Extremism and Intellectual Freedom at Ground Zero”, The Political Librarian 7(2). doi: https://doi.org/10.7936/pollib.8909
Downloads:
Download galley
View PDF