In the latest call from Republican leaders to ban certain books in schools, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster is telling his state's department of education to investigate a graphic novel on queer identity being available at a school's library. He says the content in the book is "sexually explicit" and "pornographic."
The book, Gender Queer: A Memoir, by Maia Kobabe, is recommended for grades 10 and up by its
publisher
"I call on the Department of Education or the State Board of Education, as appropriate, to promulgate statewide standards and directives to prevent pornography and other obscene content from entering our State's public schools and libraries," the governor said in a
letter
McMaster's call is the latest instance of Republican elected leaders and local school board members lashing out at books in school libraries that address topics such as queer identity, racism and sex education.
In Texas,
Gov. Greg Abbott
But Texas state Rep. Jeff Cason
called on the state's attorney general
Another Texas
lawmaker
Several
other
The topic led the Virginia gubernatorial race
The topic of investigating and banning certain books came further into the national spotlight during the recent Virginia gubernatorial race.
Republican winner Glenn Youngkin
campaigned
One of the books in question was Toni Morrison's Beloved, a book that tells the story of formerly enslaved people in the aftermath of the Civil War. The book won a Pulitzer Prize in 1988.
In a Virginia county, two school board members want to burn the books
In Virginia's Spotsylvania County, the school board recently voted to remove books in school libraries that had any "sexually explicit" material.
One book in particular that caused outrage is Adam Rapp's
33 Snowfish
Two school board members, Rabih Abuismail and Kirk Twigg, went on to say they would like to see the banned books burned.
"I think we should throw those books in a fire," Abuismail
said
Twigg said he wants to "see the books before we burn them so we can identify within our community that we are eradicating this bad stuff."
Book burning
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