Tritt has been hosting these events for the past year through his organisation Foundation 451, a reference to Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 set in a dystopian world in which the government burns illegal books. He has received death threats, but these only encourage him to give away more books.
At an event in July, he saw a teenager pick up a copy of This Book Is Gay. People walked over and she put it down. He saw her pick it up and put it down several times before taking another book and leaving. Later, she returned and asked, “Can I give this back and take the book I need?” Tritt said yes, and she began to cry.
Last year, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed HB 1557, which LGBTQ rights advocates call the “Don’t Say Gay” law because it bans classroom discussion of sexuality or gender in kindergarten through grade three, and allows parents to sue if they believe a teacher has violated the law.
DeSantis also signed the Stop the Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees Act, or the “Stop WOKE” Act, which prohibits the teaching of critical race theory in schools. The laws do not outright ban books, but due to their broad language, Florida schools are removing books that could be in violation. Teachers are stuck in the middle: they can distribute only approved books in the classroom or they could face dire consequences.
School districts have reported removing 175 books from schools across the state. DeSantis claims he is restricting books in the classroom that contain “pornography and sexual material”, including This Book Is Gay. The governor asserted most of the removed books were identified as pornographic, violent or inappropriate for their grade level.
Book bans are surging in the US, according to a recent report by the American Library Association. A record 2,571 unique titles were targeted for censorship in 2022, the ALA reported. Free speech group PEN America also recorded a rapid expansion of book bans in schools across the US. Even as these laws proliferate, educators and librarians are finding creative ways around them.
Librarians and teachers told Al Jazeera the restrictions mostly target books and curriculum relating to LGBTQ+ issues and topics on race, and the growing censorship is a backlash to African Americans, gay and transgender people demanding equal treatment.
Thousands of banned books
In May 2022, Tritt received an email from the Florida Department of Education that made his blood boil. It asked him and other teachers to remove Slaughterhouse Five and The Kite Runner from their shelves. When he got home, he channelled his anger into setting up a GoFundMe to buy copies of the two books and make them available. Within a week, he had raised more than $15,000.
Almost a year later, the flood of books forced Tritt and his wife to get a trailer to store them. They have set up four little free libraries in churches and businesses. Recently, a teacher realised she could not hand out 40 copies of The Stars Beneath Our Feet to her students because the story involved an LGBTQ character, so she gave the whole box to Tritt. He estimated his crew has distributed 3,000 books to date.
“What happens when these specific books are no longer available is, it decreases representation remarkably, and when you are not represented, you know that you do not have power,” he said.
Making digital books available
The surge in book bans may look alarming, but for those who can connect online, digital library cards are allowing anyone to access ebooks and audiobooks.
Last year, Linda Johnson, president and CEO of the Brooklyn Public Library, felt disturbed by the proliferation of book bans and wanted to combat censorship in other states. The library reached out to schools and libraries in Texas to try to partner with them, but they were hesitant because they feared losing accreditation or funding. “We decided, well, we’ll do this ourselves,” Johnson said.
The library launched Books UnBanned, a programme that allows anyone aged 13 to 21 in the US to access banned books by requesting a free digital library card. The library offers 350,000 ebooks and 200,000 audiobooks with no waitlist for cardholders.
A year later, Johnson said the library has issued cards to people in every state. “We’ve issued about 7,000 cards and we’ve circulated almost 90,000 books.”
However, teachers who refer their students to online material can face consequences. In Oklahoma, a teacher covered up her book shelf in response to a new law banning teaching of critical race theory. She posted the QR code to the Brooklyn Public Library with the message: “Definitely don’t scan this.” She was forced to resign as a result. “We actually ended up hiring her,” Johnson said.
Many of the online books tell stories of LGBTQ characters, deal with critical race theory, or explain the history of the holocaust, she said.
“These are the very stories that kids and teenagers who are feeling isolated really want to get their hands on. So we’ve been able to help them,” Johnson said.
A 14-year-old from a small, southern town wrote to request a library card, saying their local library had LGBTQ books “in stock” but they could never actually find them. Their school library also had books removed. They wanted to read The Hate U Give but could not find it anywhere. “The last time I went to the local library to look at books about LGBTQ+ I was told that I didn’t need to get those kinds of ideas in my head,” they wrote.
Johnson emphasised that not everyone has internet access at home, so the digital programme is not solving the problem for those people. She added that it is important to challenge these censorship laws because they can result in a more limited curriculum, and that also limits the books that people are craving because they do not know what they are missing.
Devastating consequences
Jesse Hagopian, a high school teacher in Seattle and organiser with the Zinn Education Project, hosts virtual study groups across the country to teach students and teachers about structural racism. He said the group recently heard from a teacher in Florida who said they were terrified to say anything about enslavement because it might make students uncomfortable.
Hagopian believes the wave of legislation that “imposes gag orders on teachers” is a backlash to the Black Lives Matter movement and the increasing numbers of people embracing their transgender identities.
“These book bans are part of a political repression campaign in this country, and we don’t respect that assault on basic democratic rights,” he said.
The project has partnered with the New Press to send free books to teachers in states facing book bans. The programme started in February and already all 56 copies of a book on critical race theory had been claimed.
Hagopian said the current censorship movement is an effort to bring back the Senator Joseph McCarthy era of the 1950s that sought to systematically expel communists and LGBTQ+ people from public institutions. “They want to drag us back in time to that period when it was criminalised to be queer or to organise for racial justice,” he said.
Without access to curriculum and books about identity and history, he said, “the consequences are devastating”. Young people will lose access to stories that will affirm their lives, and help them build a more just society.
Tritt encouraged teachers and parents in states with book bans to attend school board meetings and speak to principals to take a stand against censorship. He asked parents to stick up for teachers, who are in a vulnerable position. “We need a flood of parents writing emails to the principals and school boards, because emails are public record,” he said.