ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Froma Harrop: I was a teenage librarian. Don't arrest me

From the commentary: Threats against librarians begin the end of civilization.

wct.op.fromaharrop.jpg
Froma Harrop Commentary

Some time ago, I worked after school and during summers at my town's public library. My supervisor was Mrs. Fowkes, a stunning grandmother who, in summer, wore straw hats with flowers.

wct.op.fromaharrop.jpg
Froma Harrop Commentary
Tribune graphic
More Froma Harrop
Summary: Demand for gasoline keeps rising. But so apparently is demand for space on the roads. Moan about high gas prices, if you must. The traffic doesn't seem to have noticed.
Summary: If the activist left succeeded in portraying itself as the heart and soul of the Democratic Party, the fault lies in much of the political media. Rather than sending Democrats a message, California has sent the media a message on where Democrats really stand on crime. ... Guess what? They don't like it.
Summary: Had Cuellar lost to Cisneros in the Texas primary, the results would not have been a new lefty in Congress but another Democratic seat lost to a Republican. Smart progressives know that real power comes from supporting candidates, who, even if not their ideal, can get elected.
Summary: OK. We don't really know whether big movies with a touch of IQ will bring in audiences the theaters need. Let's just say the coming attractions were doing their bit. "Jurassic World: Dominion," here we come.

There I mastered the trick of repairing loose bindings with glue and folded wax paper. Then I was tasked with rolling the carts down the aisles, placing books in their exact Dewey Decimal location. After a while, I was allowed to work the front desk.

It was there that Mrs. Fowkes, standing straight-spined in a cloud of lavender water, explained to me how we handled dirty books.

Ours was a community that associated education with open minds, and so the library felt obliged to carry sexually explicit books deemed of literary value. The solution was to store them hidden on a shelf right behind the front desk and check them out if a patron specifically asked for the title.

ADVERTISEMENT

During the slow times, I would take a look. It was there that I became familiar with the pornographic novels of Henry Miller. My, my, my.

Many states and towns are making it a crime for libraries to carry books local censors have declared off-limits. Even more than pornography, today's thought police seem incensed over gay-friendly literature and controversial arguments on race.

None of this explains why a school district in Arkansas actually removed "Harry Potter" from school library open shelves. Something to do with praise for "good witches," so we hear.

North Dakota may ban public libraries from lending books that contain "explicit sexual material." A bill before the state Senate goes into agonizing detail about what parts of a female breast may appear in an illustration or even word descriptions. Librarians who offend could face up to 30 days in jail.

Missouri, meanwhile, passed a measure that could put school librarians behind bars for up to a year.

Such laws evoke terrible dreams of Mrs. Fowkes being hauled away in chains and me being placed in juvenile detention. But there's also something quaint about them.

Mobile phones give Americans easy access to the vilest porn in all its variety -- and in easy-to-watch video. There's also no lack of online commentary on topics many deem too woke to handle. And you can't stop any of it.

Nowadays the trollers tend to be right-wingers playing power games and getting a charge out of their intimidation tactics. But crusades to police media consumption are also being waged by elements on the left. Several colleges now let students anonymously report someone they feel — or say they feel — shows discrimination or bias.

ADVERTISEMENT

A group of Stanford University professors wants to end its system whereby students can report a "Protected Identity Harm Incident." What stirred opposition was an anonymous denunciation of a student found reading Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf."

First off, reading the Nazi manifesto in no way indicates approval of its message. People read it to better understand the lunacy behind Nazi propaganda. Any serious student of the Holocaust would read it to better understand the horrific events it helped unleash.

Back at Henry Miller, later feminists denounced his books as "male chauvinist," which they were, and degraded women, which they did. But go ahead and read them for their literary value or for other obvious reasons. And if your public library fears carrying Miller's works, Amazon will be happy to fill in.

More Commentary:
From the commentary: Sometimes, for some women, separate is not only equal but better.
From the commentary: Further, Pence was perfectly willing to watch a multi-front coup attempt inflate on every side of him for months without making a sound, the same way he spent every hour of Trump’s decency-mocking presidency as its primary lickspittle.
From the commentary: Government bailouts do not penalize bad management and lack of oversight, or risky investment strategies that caused the problem.
From the commentary: While it is increasingly difficult to launch successful boycotts against large companies, pro-lifers can take their business to Walgreens that don't dispense the pill, or to independent pharmacies.
From the commentary: In describing the 1930s Depression, humorist Will Rogers said, “If stupidity got us into this mess, then stupidity can get us out of it.” That would appear to be the strategy of the “smart” people now running our government.
From the commentary: "Every tribe has its own words, basically, and it becomes more and more difficult to have conversations across tribal fault lines if we can't even agree on the terminology."
From the commentary:
From the commentary:
From the commentary: For it to turn its back on its own values, and on the voices of concern it is hearing from its friends in the American Jewish community, would be a very troubling and dangerous mistake.
From the commentary: We need to start the conversation about menopause by extending explicit invitations to men to join in.

Meanwhile, the defenders of youthful innocence surely know that teens are finding all kinds of "objectionable" material where they themselves go for it — in the online universe. More than worrying about what people read, they should worry that people aren't reading much at all.

Threats against librarians begin the end of civilization.

Froma Harrop is an American writer and author. She can be reached at fharrop@wctrib.com or on Twitter @FromaHarrop.

WCT.OP.Commentary.jpg
More commetary:
The transformation of Bethesda Grand in Willmar began in 2016. The final phase began during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the remodel of the west wing and memory care unit into "neighborhoods." This year, the east wing will be remodeled and an addition constructed.
From the editorial: For the moment, though, assuring the safety of the financial system and getting on top of inflation are separate tasks. This is no time to retreat.
Area funerals scheduled through March 27, 2023
Editorial cartoonist Bill Day draws on Ron DeSantis statement against Ukraine.
The RIPE proposal offers conservation payments of at least $100 an acre while producing a crop $100 an animal unit for livestock. It might be the incentive needed for increased buy-in.
The Tribune publishes Records as part of its obligation to inform readers about the business of public institutions and to serve as a keeper of the local historical record. All items are written by Tribune staff members based on information contained in public documents from the state court system and from law enforcement agencies. It is the Tribune’s policy that this column contain a complete record. Requests for items to be withheld will not be granted.
Following Stanford's loss to eighth-seeded Ole Miss on Sunday, it marks the first time since 1998 that two No. 1 seeds in the same women's tournament lost before the Sweet 16.
Pro
Prince finished one 3-pointer shy of tying the NBA record for most 3-pointers without a miss, held by Ben Gordon (twice) and Latrell Sprewell.
The Willmar City Council unanimously made the decision Monday to give Willmar Ten additional time to present more solid numbers of the cost to renovate the former JCPenney location in the Uptown Willmar mall to become the new community center and city hall.
Orono, the No. 2 seed in the Class AAA boys basketball tournament, is coached by former Bird Island-Lake Lillian star Barry Wohler

What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT