We well know of the most famous cases of banned books: James Joyceâs Ulysses, Henry Millerâs Tropic of Cancer, Allen Ginsbergâs Howl. In fact, a full 46 of Modern Libraryâs â100 Best Novelsâ have been suppressed or challenged in some way. The American Library Association maintains a page that details the charges against each one. Harper Leeâs To Kill a Mockingbird saw a challenge in the Vernon Verona Sherill, New York school district in 1980 as a âfilthy, trashy novelâ and in 1996, Lindale, Texas banned it from the advanced placement English reading list because it âconflicted with the values of the community.â Steinbeckâs Grapes of Wrath has a lengthy rap sheet, including total banning in Ireland (1953), Morris, Manitoba (1982), and all high school classes in Kanawha, Iowa (1980). The list of censored undisputed classics—every one of which surely has its own piece of giant store art in Barnes & Nobles nationwide—goes on.
In many ways this is typical. âThe banned books lists youâll find in many libraries and bookstores,â writes John Mark Ockerbloom at Everybodyâs Libraries, âdoesnât [sic] focus much on the political samizdat, security exposés, or portrayals of Mohammed that are the objects of forcible suppression today. Instead, theyâre often full of classics and popular titles sold widely in bookstores and onlineâor dominated by books written for young readers, or assigned for school reading.â Are these listsâand the banned books celebrations that occasion themâjust âshameless propagandaâ as conservative Thomas Sowell alleges? âIs it wrong to call these books banned?â asks Ockerbloom in his essay âWhy Banned Books Week Matters.â Of course he answers in the negative; ânot if you take readers seriously. An unread book, after all, has as little impact as an unpublished book.â Books that donât pass muster with administrators, school boards, library associations, and legislators of all kinds, argues Ockerbloom, can be as inaccessible to young readers as those that get destroyed or fully suppressed in parts of the world without legal provisions for free speech.
This situation is in great part remediated by the free availability of texts on the internet, whether those currently under a ban or those thatâeven if they line the shelves in brick and mortar stores and Amazon warehousesâstill meet with frequent challenges from community organizations eager to control what their citizens read. Today, in honor of this yearâs Banned Books Week, we bring you free online texts of 14 banned books that appear on the Modern Libraryâs top 100 novels list. Next to each title, see some of the reasons these books were challenged, banned, or, in many cases, burned.
- The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Kindle + Other Formats â Read Online Now)
This staple of high school English classes everywhere seems to mostly get a pass. It did, however, see a 1987 challenge at the Baptist College in Charleston, SC for âlanguage and sexual references.â
- Ulysses, by James Joyce (iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Hypertext – Read Online Now)
Seized and burned by postal officials in New York when it arrived stateside in 1922, Joyceâs masterwork generally goes unread these days because of its legendary difficulty, but for ten years, until Judge John Woolseyâs decision in its favor in 1932, the novel was only available in the U.S. as a bootleg. Ulysses was also burnedâand bannedâin Ireland, Canada, and England.
- 1984, by George Orwell (Kindle + Other Formats – Kindle Format – Read Online Now)
Orwellâs totalitarian nightmare often seems like one of the very few things liberals and conservatives can agree onâno one wants to live in the future he imagines. Nonetheless, the novel was challenged in Jackson County, Florida in 1981 for its supposedly âpro-communistâ message, in addition to its âexplicit sexual matter.â
- Animal Farm, by George Orwell (Kindle Format – Read Online Now)
Again the target of right-wing ire, Orwellâs work was challenged in Wisconsin in 1963 by the John Birch Society, who objected to the words âmasses will revolt.â A 1968 New Survey found that the novel regularly appeared on school lists of âproblem books.â The reason most often cited: âOrwell was a communist.â
- Slaughterhouse Five, by Kurt Vonnegut (Audio)
Vonnegutâs classic has been challenged by parents and school boards since 1973, when it was burned in Drake, North Dakota. Most recently, itâs been removed from a sophomore reading list at the Coventry, RI high school in 2000; challenged by an organization called LOVE (Livingstone Organization for Values in Education) in Howell, MI in 2007; and challenged, but retained, along with eight other books, in Arlington Heights, IL in 2006. In that case, a school board member, âelected amid promises to bring her Christian beliefs into all board decision-making, raised the controversy based on excerpts from the books sheâd found on the internet.â Hear Vonnegut himself read the novel here.
- The Call of the Wild, by Jack London (iPad/iPhone â Kindle + Other Formats â Read Online Now)
Londonâs most popular novel hasnât seen any official suppression in the U.S., but it was banned in Italy and Yugoslavia in 1929. The book was burned in Nazi bonfires in 1933; something of a historical irony given Londonâs own racist politics.
- The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair (iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now)
The Nazis also burned Sinclairâs novel because of the authorâs socialist views. In 1959, East Germany banned the book as âinimical to communism.â
- Lady Chatterlyâs Lover, by D.H. Lawrence (iPad/iPhone – Read Online Now)
Lawrence courted controversy everywhere. Chatterly was banned by U.S. customs in 1929 and has since been banned in Ireland (1932), Poland (1932), Australia (1959), Japan (1959), India (1959), Canada (1960) and, most recently, China in 1987 because it âwill corrupt the minds of young people and is also against the Chinese tradition.â
- In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote (Read First Section Online)
This true crime classic was banned, then reinstated, at Savannah, Georgiaâs Windsor Forest High School in 2000 after a parent âcomplained about sex, violence, and profanity.â
- Sons and Lovers, by D.H. Lawrence (Read Online Now â Kindle + Other Formats)
Lawrence endured a great deal of persecution in his lifetime for his work, which was widely considered pornographic. Thirty years after his death, in 1961, a group in Oklahoma City calling itself Mothers Unite for Decency âhired a trailer, dubbed it âsmutmobile,â and displayed books deemed objectionable,â including Sons and Lovers.
- Naked Lunch, by William S. Burroughs (Audio)
If anyone belongs on a list of obscene authors, itâs Burroughs, which is only one reason of the many reasons he deserves to be read. In 1965, the Boston Superior Court banned Burroughsâ novel. The State Supreme Court reversed that decision the following year. Listen to Burroughs read the novel here.
- Women in Love, by D.H. Lawrence (iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now)
Poor Lawrence could not catch a break. In one of many such acts against his work, the sensitive writerâs fifth novel was declared obscene in 1922 by the rather unimaginatively named New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.
- An American Tragedy, by Theodore Dreiser (Read Online Now)
American literatureâs foremost master of melodrama, Dreiserâs novel was banned in Boston in 1927 and burned by the Nazi bonfires because it âdeals with low love affairs.â
You can learn much more about the many books that have been banned, suppressed, or censored at the University of Pennsylvaniaâs âBanned Books Onlineâ page, and learn more about the many events and resources available for Banned Books Week at the American Library Associationâs website.
Related Content:
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North Carolina County Celebrates Banned Book Week By Banning Ralph Ellisonâs Invisible Man ⦠Then Reversing It
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Read 14 Great Banned & Censored Novels Free Online: For Banned Books Week 2014 is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Read 14 Great Banned & Censored Novels Free Online: For Banned Books Week 2014
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