PRO AND CON
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* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Newport-Mesa Unified School District board will
discuss tonight whether two books, “Snow Falling on Cedars,” by David
Guterson, and “Of Love and Shadows,” by Isabel Allende, should be removed
from the reading list of Newport Harbor High School. The following
letters offer two ideas of how the board should proceed.
PRO -- School standards need to be higher
The vitriolic diatribe and hysterical cries of censorship directed
against school board member Wendy Leece are not only shocking but
indicate that these readers 1) failed to understand the nature and
premise of Leece’s request, and 2) failed to notice or chose to ignore
that board President David Brooks agreed with Leece. Not one of the
letters printed accused Brooks of censorship nor did any call for his
removal from the board, as they did Leece. It appears that what we have
is not an honest belief in any real threat of censorship, but rather
thinly veiled, preexisting rancor and animus toward Leece.
The Pilot asked on Jan. 25: “What standards should the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District have for classroom books?” I would suggest that
we need to raise, rather than lower, the bar for standards for all
curriculum: textbooks, academics and demeanor in the classroom.
“Snow Falling on Cedars” fails to meet appropriate standards due to
its numerous passages of an explicit sexual nature, which, while
tastefully done, place the book in the adult-reading category. No one is
condemning the book or calling for banning it. Equating the objections to
it as a textbook as such, and characterizing Leece as a fascist or
would-be book burner, is not only patently unfair, it is totally without
basis in fact.
There is no doubt that “Cedars” does not compare in the least to the
objectionable material young people can readily access elsewhere.
However, we’re talking about the school district, responsible for the
material it approves for children. That material certainly needs to be
more than a cut above what prevails elsewhere in today’s permissive
society.
In addition to the sexual content contained in “Cedars,” there are
also numerous passages containing profanity and obscene language which,
although they may represent an accurate description of the real-life
situations depicted, nevertheless have no place in the approved school
curriculum.
The major plot of the book deals with the fear, ignorance, hatred and
prejudice of a community toward Japanese American citizens and residents
during and after World War II. This results in a rush to judgment of a
Japanese man in a murder trial and the efforts of two journalists to
counteract it.
However, there is a subplot involving the clandestine love affair
between two teenagers. Therein lies the rub. The explicit sex scenes, no
matter how tastefully or delicately presented, are by their explicit
nature unsuitable for teenagers who, in general, are notoriously
unreliable when it comes to handling their passions and impulses in a
responsible manner.
This issue is about adult authority figures on our school board and in
the classroom putting their stamp of approval on material of a
potentially titillating nature, capable of arousing passions in young
readers, whose lack of maturity and experience in exhibiting self-control
puts them at risk of acting on those passions. Most parents, for good
reason, do not want their children to be sexually active. Why make it
more likely by romanticizing it in a novel used as a text in English
class?
Steve Smith has it right when he says students need at least one place
that can be a “‘safer harbor from all that adults have wreaked on
society” (“Trustee Leece’s action far from being censorship,” Jan. 27).
It is incumbent upon the Newport-Mesa school board to provide such a
place.
The community owes a debt of gratitude to Leece for her unwavering
commitment to quality, age-appropriate education for all the district’s
students. Her willingness to put in the time, energy and research to that
end sets her apart as a person of extraordinary dedication and moral
courage. Those who criticize and vilify her for her stand need to step
back, examine their motives and take a deep breath.
I appeal to the community and the Daily Pilot not to make a religious
issue of this. It is not about religion. It is about age-appropriateness
of adult material being advocated for children. The school district is
charged with protecting our children while in the classroom. Whether or
not children are exposed elsewhere to such material (and worse) every day
is not the issue.
I also ask the Daily Pilot, how representative of the total letters
received are those they printed? The printed letters were 9 to 1 against
Leece’s stand. A poll taken by another publication reported that of 174
responses, 66% would not like to see the books approved for use. In
another Letter to the Editor (Daily Pilot, Jan. 30), the 78-year-old
writer said she had been reading since she was 3, and she saw no problem
with this book. I dare say she did not have access to material of this
nature through her school when she was growing up.
As trustee David Brooks said: “It’s very simple . . . there are other
things out there that make the same points without giving such graphic
depictions of the sexual type” (Daily Pilot, Jan. 25). Whatever socially
redeeming or literary qualities “Cedars” may be deemed to possess, it is
no masterpiece by any stretch, and it reaches beyond the boundaries of
acceptability for inclusion in a high school English class.
ILA JOHNSON
Costa Mesa
CON -- Students can’t afford to be sheltered
As a former librarian, I was most disturbed to read of Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee Wendy Leece’s suggestion that two novels,
“Snow Falling on Cedars,” by David Guterson, and “Of Love and Shadows,”
by Isabel Allende, be removed from the high school reading list because
she disapproved of their sexual content.
If perhaps we lived in another area -- perhaps a small Midwestern town
or in the Bible belt -- where new ideas and ways of interpreting social
problems might be viewed with suspicion, then Leece’s opinions might be
understandable. But this is Newport Beach, an upscale community with a
socially diverse population.
Taken as a whole, neither novel focuses entirely on sex, and each has
redemptive qualities when the entire work is read. The struggle to
survive and triumph against corruption that would stifle their humanity
is a theme present here, as in other works of literary merit. Allende is
an internationally known author, and Guterson is a contemporary writer.
If Leece objects to these two books, what else on the reading list will
she go after next? Were Leece an avid reader, then she would recognize
that sexual themes in literature often mirror life. Should novels such as
“Anna Karenina,” “Madame Bovary,” “Return of the Native” or “The Catcher
in the Rye” be stricken from present or future reading lists because they
may contain passages of which one disapproves?
The prohibition and censorship of books is not a hallmark of an
educated society. A good book widens our perception of the human
experience, entertains us, challenges our viewpoints and permits us to
appreciate the power of the written word. The students who may opt to
read these books are future citizens, who in the span of a few short
years will vote, defend our nation and raise families of their own. Some
may even serve as future trustees or school board members.
Many will go on to college, where their minds will be challenged with
ideas that will expand their universe. Why protect, shelter and create an
intellectually restrictive atmosphere in our schools that will turn out a
generation of small-minded and prudish high school graduates?
If one person can effect the removal of even one title, he or she will
be back for more books and ideas they find fault with. These titles are
worthy of being read, by young adults, their parents and grandparents.
The true lesson to convey to students of all ages is to read. You
don’t have to agree with everything that you read nor even like it. But
don’t close your mind or attempt to prohibit others from reading anything
that may not mirror your values. That is a far more dangerous attitude
than objecting to a few offensive passages.
ANDREW AROS
Balboa Island
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