Banning Harry Potter
By Elizabeth D. Schafer History News Service
Teenage wizard Harry Potter, the hero of a popular
children's book series, routinely outwits fantastical
creatures in his quests to vanquish evil forces. But some
parents think Harry is the evil being who should be
subdued.
Mimicking the paranoid Chicken Little, a fictional
character who assumes the sky is falling when an acorn hits
him, the anti-Potter parents are forming illogical
conclusions similar to those of generations of book censors
before them. These protesters demand the banning of Harry
Potter books from public schools. They say the books are too
scary and border on the occult. Some have even accused the
books' author, Joanne K. Rowling, of being a witch seeking
converts.
Book banning is a familiar foe of American education and
peaks during cycles of political and cultural conservatism.
"Censorship reflects a society's lack of confidence in
itself," United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart
remarked. "It is a hallmark of an authoritarian regime."
The Potter protesters emulate previous censors. Since
colonial times, adults have regulated what children read.
Early American children's books instructed with moral
examples. The literary ancestors of Harry Potter, adventure
and fantasy stories, became popular after 1850. Around that
time, attitudes toward children changed. Children were
encouraged to indulge in imaginative play. However,
concerned parents criticized books that addressed what they
considered taboo subjects such as magic.
Book-banning strategies throughout American history
reflect the country's changing culture. Like Harry Potter,
Mark Twain's novels, featuring boyish rascals, have
occasionally been accused of absurd transgressions. In 1885,
literary elites thought "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
was too crude for refined readers. Twenty years later,
critics complained that the characters were poor role
models. By the 1950s, civil rights advocates censured
Twain's characters for using racist language.
With National Children's Book Week just around the
corner, even more attention has been drawn to the fact that
this year the Harry Potter stories join earlier children's
novels that have been challenged. In the 1950s, J.D.
Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye" inflamed censorious
adults who were afraid their children might use slang to
imitate the protagonist, Holden Caulfield. Censors of the
1990s are concerned about the magical spells Harry Potter
casts.
In a different decade, Harry Potter might not have
suffered from such a ludicrous backlash. Censorship was
mostly dormant until the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Book banning gained new momentum as groups and individuals
publicly imposed their punitive opinions against literature,
especially fantasies such as the Potter novels. Children's
books were burned, pulled from shelves and removed from
required reading lists. Selected passages and illustrations
were cut out or inked over.
Recycling predecessors' rhetoric, censors of the 1990s,
many of whom came of age in the 1980s, have focused on
perceived evil in children's books. Book banners, primarily
members of the Moral Majority and religious right, assume
their beliefs should be embraced by all Americans. Instead
of prohibiting what their children can read, these censors
try to limit all children's access to literature they deem
inappropriate.
They label targeted books dangerous because they claim
the stories provide bad examples for impressionable
children. Protesting parents say books like Harry otter are
subversive and do not promote family values.
Many school administrators quickly appease censors to
avoid awkward publicity. They condemn the Harry Potter books
as potentially threatening. Opponents argue that censorship
is detrimental to students' intellectual development.
Like the boorish non-wizard Muggles in the Harry Potter
novels, most censors lack imagination. Unable to separate
reality from fantasy, they are oblivious to the books' theme
of love conquering evil. Harry's true magic is that he is
empowered by his compassion and tolerance of others.
Potter's antagonists misinterpret out-of-context
sentences because they refuse to read the books. This
undisciplined scrutiny is a typical book-banning pattern.
Even ministers have preached against heroic Harry Potter's
battles with his archenemy Lord Voldemort. They say the
books' popularity is evidence of Satanic influence.
Mark Twain enjoyed the publicity and profits he gained
from censorship. He wrote his publisher that the censors
"have given us a rattling tip-top puff which will go into
every paper in the country." He predicted the notoriety
gained would sell at least an additional 25,000 copies. And
Harry Potter's author is surely benefiting from the censors'
misguided attempts as curious readers flock to bookstores
and buy her books.
If efforts to restrict children's books like Harry Potter
are successful, they can cause more harm than eradicating
valuable literature. "You don't have to burn books to
destroy a culture," Ray Bradbury, author of "Fahrenheit
451," warned. "Just get people to stop reading them."
As long as conservatism prevails, Harry Potter may rival
Huck Finn and Holden Caulfield to become one of America's
most banned boys.
Elizabeth D. Schafer is an independent historian from
Auburn, Ala., and a writer for the History News Service.
[Elizabeth D. Schafer, P.O. Box 2764, Auburn, AL
36861-2764. Telephone: (334) 821-0580; fax: (800) 468-6144;
e-mail: edschafer@reporters.net.]
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This article was posted on November 13, 1999.
Pictured at top (left to right): Niccolo
Machiavelli, King Louis XIV of France, Abraham Lincoln,
Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan at the Scopes
Monkey Trial, Margaret Thatcher.
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