Obama – Photo: Prince George’s County Memorial Library System, via TikTok.
The Prince George’s County Memorial Library System has partnered with the Obama Foundation for its annual “Rock Banned” campaign, which seeks to shine a spotlight on books that have been banned or censored.
In a minute-long video, supporters of banned books dance to “I’m Still Standing” by Elton John in various libraries throughout Prince George’s County.
After the dance montage of children and adults holding banned titles, including To Kill A Mockingbird and The Stonewall Riots: Coming Out in the Streets, former President Barack Obama appears.
“PG County Libraries rock banned books!” the 44th president says while holding The Color Purple aloft. “Do you?”
The Rock Banned collaboration between the library system and the Obama Foundation is meant to show readers that books are essential to understanding the human experience.
“In the library, we have [books that] like mirrors reflect your own experience, but we also have items that act as windows into someone else’s,” says Megan Sutherland, interim Chief Operating Officer for Public Services at PG’s County Libraries told Metro Weekly. “That’s how we grow as a community, how we understand each other, and how we help to understand a lot of the issues of our world.”
“The free, robust exchange of ideas has always been at the heart of American democracy,” the former President said in an open letter to the librarians of America earlier last week. “The First Amendment of our Constitution states that freedom begins with our capacity to share and access ideas – even, and maybe especially, the ones we disagree with.”
The county’s Rock Banned campaign began in September 2022 as an attempt to turn a national event — Banned Books Week — into a series of events dedicated to preserving banned books and celebrating the freedom to read that can be held throughout the year.
The campaign features monthly discussions about a banned title focusing on books with LGBTQ and/or people of color, book displays for banned books, and a keynote address. Author and journalist Leonard Pitts Jr. delivered last year’s address.
The events are not without controversy, even in Maryland, which is considered a relatively liberal state. Two Prince George’s County libraries in New Carrollton and Greenbelt were vandalized with anti-LGBTQ hate speech during Pride month last year. Additionally, an event intended to celebrate black queer literature was disrupted, according to Sutherland.
In 2022, 1,477 book titles had been banned in some form for their discussion of “controversial topics,” especially titles highlighting experiences from LGBTQ, black, and indigenous communities or penned by LGBTQ, black, or indigenous writers.
PEN America, a non-profit organization that works to defend freedom of speech and expression in the United States has kept an index of books banned during the 2022-2023 school year. These book bans have been documented in 37 states, with Texas, Florida, Missouri, Utah, and South Carolina leading the list.
The index also found that of the 1,477 banned books, 30% discussed race or featured characters of color, and 26% examined LGBTQ topics and themes. This is a 28% jump in banned books from the same time last year, according to PEN America.
“For communities and groups that are marginalized and [being] targeted, being able to see personal experience reflected back in the literature or media that you’re consuming is extraordinarily powerful,” Sutherland said.
“If you’re able to read a book and either learn about a true life figure whose experiences are similar to your own or see that in a fictional character, there is a lot of comfort to know that you aren’t there by yourself.”
Put on your ruby slippers to strut down the red carpet as we ask what queerness means for Academy Awards voters past and present.
By Paul Klein
March 1, 2025
On March 2, Hollywood's elite will gather at the Dolby Theater in Los Angeles for the glitziest night of the year -- The 97th Academy Awards. When the Oscar-cast goes live on ABC Sunday evening -- and, for the first time ever, simultaneously streams on Hulu -- seven LGBTQ individuals will sit in hushed anticipation at the possibility of winning Hollywood's highest honors.
For a body often criticized for its lack of diversity and inclusivity, and with the arts under a prolonged political attack from far-right politicians, Sunday night offers a number of potentially groundbreaking moments for queer representation in front of and behind the screen.
Schools run by the U.S. Department of Defense have reportedly scrapped affinity clubs celebrating diverse identities, canceled celebrations that acknowledge those identities, and attempted to remove books containing LGBTQ content or characters.
The moves come following an executive order from Donald Trump seeking to end what the president has termed "racial indoctrination" and "discriminatory equity ideology" in schools, referring to lessons dealing with race, racism, or identity groups, as well as the inclusion of LGBTQ-related topics, as part of the classroom curriculum.
While few U.S. public school districts -- which are locally controlled -- have made changes in response to the orders, as part of the federal government, the Defense Department has rapidly sought to comply.
A federal judge blocked Texas A&M University from banning a drag show from being held on any of the university's 11 campuses. The temporary preliminary injunction was issued on March 24 by Judge Lee Rosenthal of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
As a result, "Draggieland," a student-produced drag event, will go on as planned at the Rudder Theatre on the university's College Station campus this Thursday, March 27.
The pageant -- which has sold out the 750-seat Rudder Theatre every year since 2020 -- features contestants who wear clothing or makeup that often, but does not always, run counter to their gender identity. The contestants also dance and answer questions about what drag and LGBTQ culture means to them.
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