Culture Even Homer Gets Mobbed - A Massachusetts school has banned ‘The Odyssey.’

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Even Homer Gets Mobbed

A Massachusetts school has banned ‘The Odyssey.’

By
Meghan Cox Gurdon
Updated Dec. 27, 2020 4:01 pm ET

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A sustained effort is under way to deny children access to literature. Under the slogan #DisruptTexts, critical-theory ideologues, schoolteachers and Twitter agitators are purging and propagandizing against classic texts—everything from Homer to F. Scott Fitzgerald to Dr. Seuss.

Their ethos holds that children shouldn’t have to read stories written in anything other than the present-day vernacular—especially those “in which racism, sexism, ableism, anti-Semitism, and other forms of hate are the norm,” as young-adult novelist Padma Venkatraman writes in School Library Journal. No author is valuable enough to spare, Ms. Venkatraman instructs: “Absolving Shakespeare of responsibility by mentioning that he lived at a time when hate-ridden sentiments prevailed, risks sending a subliminal message that academic excellence outweighs hateful rhetoric.”

The subtle complexities of literature are being reduced to the crude clanking of “intersectional” power struggles. Thus Seattle English teacher Evin Shinn tweeted in 2018 that he’d “rather die” than teach “The Scarlet Letter,” unless Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel is used to “fight against misogyny and slut-shaming.”

Outsiders got a glimpse of the intensity of the #DisruptTexts campaign recently when self-described “antiracist teacher” Lorena Germán complained that many classics were written more than 70 years ago: “Think of US society before then & the values that shaped this nation afterwards. THAT is what is in those books.”

Jessica Cluess, an author of young-adult fiction, shot back: “If you think Hawthorne was on the side of the judgmental Puritans . . . then you are an absolute idiot and should not have the title of educator in your twitter bio.”

An online horde descended, accused Ms. Cluess of racism and “violence,” and demanded that Penguin Random House cancel her contract. The publisher hasn’t complied, perhaps because Ms. Cluess tweeted a ritual self-denunciation: “I take full responsibility for my unprovoked anger toward Lorena Germán. . . . I am committed to learning more about Ms. Germán’s important work with #DisruptTexts. . . . I will strive to do better.” That didn’t stop Ms. Cluess’s literary agent, Brooks Sherman, from denouncing her “racist and unacceptable” opinions and terminating their professional relationship.

The demands for censorship appear to be getting results. “Be like Odysseus and embrace the long haul to liberation (and then take the Odyssey out of your curriculum because it’s trash),” tweeted Shea Martin in June. “Hahaha,” replied Heather Levine, an English teacher at Lawrence (Mass.) High School. “Very proud to say we got the Odyssey removed from the curriculum this year!” When I contacted Ms. Levine to confirm this, she replied that she found the inquiry “invasive.” The English Department chairman of Lawrence Public Schools, Richard Gorham, didn’t respond to emails.

“It’s a tragedy that this anti-intellectual movement of canceling the classics is gaining traction among educators and the mainstream publishing industry,” says science-fiction writer Jon Del Arroz, one of the rare industry voices to defend Ms. Cluess. “Erasing the history of great works only limits the ability of children to become literate.”

He’s right. If there is harm in classic literature, it comes from not teaching it. Students excused from reading foundational texts may imagine themselves lucky to get away with YA novels instead—that’s what the #DisruptTexts people want—but compared with their better-educated peers they will suffer a poverty of language and cultural reference. Worse, they won’t even know it.

Mrs. Gurdon writes the Journal’s Children’s Books column.


 
I'm old enough to remember when the religious-right were busy storming public libraries demanding that classic literature be hauled out unto the streets and burned...Now it's the left. We are so totally fucked..

My wife is a retired English teacher, taught for 23 years and had her share of uprisings over her choices of titles she had her students read in her AP Honors class. She politely told the agitators to go fuck a donkey...
 
Nothing like yelling at people that lived hundreds and even thousands of years ago for not having CURRENT YEAR morals.

I always love how they never realize that people will be thinking exactly the same thing about us 50 years from now. Hell, 10 years from now. Trump was the first president to be completely pro gay marriage during his campaign; even 2012 Obama was still wishy washy about it. But that's all been memory holed now.
 
Absolving Shakespeare of responsibility by mentioning that he lived at a time when hate-ridden sentiments prevailed, risks sending a subliminal message that academic excellence outweighs hateful rhetoric.
That's because it does. These are the same idiots who would've objected to Operation Paperclip because "Nazi scientists are Nazis."
Give kids books to read at home and then read with them. Take responsibility for exposing them to classic literature instead of letting the school system decide what they can and can't read.
It's at this point that public schools prove they are worthless. If the onus is on the parents to educate their own children on Shakespeare, Homer and Dr. Seuss, then what good are schools when they increasingly refuse to do their own jobs?
 
I worry about homeschooling my kids. That lacking the education background, I won't be able to teach them properly and they will be at a disadvantage.

But news articles like this give me hope. As the American school system continues to hobble itself, my kids will be at an advantage by not going.
Just shove them in front of this and they'll be fine.

 
I worry about homeschooling my kids. That lacking the education background, I won't be able to teach them properly and they will be at a disadvantage.

But news articles like this give me hope. As the American school system continues to hobble itself, my kids will be at an advantage by not going.
How will they be at a disadvantage? Will they miss the "proper socialization" of being thrown into a glorified prison, where they're bullied into a pecking order and driven to the brink of suicide by some of the nastiest maneaters in the country?
 
It's at this point that public schools prove they are worthless. If the onus is on the parents to educate their own children on Shakespeare, Homer and Dr. Seuss, then what good are schools when they increasingly refuse to do their own jobs?
2020 really has shown more than ever just how useless the public schooling system is. And it was useless WAY before current year.

You know the teachers knew it too because they were openly telling parents in September NOT to get involved in the indoctrinations, errrr I mean Zoom lessons. They've been relying all this time on parents not having the ability to know what they were teaching their children.
 
I remember reading the Odyssey in school. I think I would have remembered if Odysseus gassed all the crippled female Jews to start a race war.
I remember a part where he blinded a cyclops which wanted to eat them, which is ableist and cannibalphobic.

Oh, and the sailors being led astray by Sirens, which is sexist!
 
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