Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thousands of books banned in US prisons

- BY HILLEL ITALIE

NEW YORK — Tens of thousands of books are being banned or restricted by U.S. prisons, according to a new report from PEN America. The list includes everything from self-help books to an Elmore Leonard novel.

“The common concept underpinni­ng the censorship we’re seeing is that certain ideas and informatio­n are a threat,” said the report’s lead author, Moira Marquis, senior manager in the prison and justice writing department at PEN, the literary and free expression organizati­on.

“Reading Between the Bars” draws upon public record requests, calls from PEN to prison mailrooms, dozens of accounts from inmates and PEN’s struggles to distribute its guide for prison writing, “The Sentences That Create Us: Crafting A Writer’s Life in Prison,” which came out last year.

Marquis said the most common official reasons for bans are security and sexual content, terms that can apply to a very wide range of titles. Michigan’s “restricted” list includes Leonard’s thriller “Cuba Libre,” set right before the 1898 SpanishAme­rican War, and Frederick Forsyth’s “The Day of the Jackal,” about a profession­al assassin’s attempt to murder French President Charles de Gaulle in the 1960s. Both novels were cited as a “threat to the order/ security of institutio­n.”

“One of the books (‘Day of the Jackal’) deals with the planned assassinat­ion of a political leader/methods for engaging in such activities and the second (‘Cuba Libre’) deals with an individual engaged in various criminal enterprise­s,” a spokespers­on for the Michigan Department of Correction­s told The Associated Press in an email. “As part of the updated restricted publicatio­n process, a new Literary Review Committee has been formed to review items that were previously placed on the restricted publicatio­n list, to determine if they should remain or be removed.”

Amy Schumer’s memoir “The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo” was flagged by Florida officials for graphic sexual content and for being “a threat to the security, order, or rehabilita­tive objectives of the correction­al system or the safety of any person.”

Other books to appear on banned lists: Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War,” the compilatio­n “Prison Ramen: Recipes and Stories from Behind Bars,” Barrington Barber’s “Anyone Can Draw: Create Sensationa­l Artwork in Easy Steps” and Robert Greene’s self-help bestseller “48 Laws of Power.”

“It’s a form of control. It’s the ultimate form of power of manipulati­on,” Greene said in a statement issued through PEN.

In its report, PEN found parallels between the frequency of prison bans and book bannings in schools and libraries. In Florida, PEN has estimated that more than 40% of all library bans took place in Florida in 2022. Meanwhile, the organizati­on found that more than 22,000 books are banned from Florida prisons — the highest of any state — as of early this year, with some entries dating back to the 1990s. Texas, another frequent site of library bannings, had more than 10,000 prison book bans, second only to Florida.

Incidents of banning are likely much higher than what PEN has compiled, according to “Reading Between the Bars,” because record keeping by many prisons is erratic or nonexisten­t. Kentucky and New Mexico are among more than 20 states that do not keep centralize­d records.

“Prison book programs have mostly tried to raise awareness locally when prisons implement new censorship restrictio­ns for communitie­s they serve,” the report reads. “But these programs are largely run by volunteers and struggle to keep up with the demand for books even absent censorship. The upshot is that there have been few nationwide efforts to analyze trends in carceral censorship.”

Marquis said PEN places bans into two categories: content-specific, in which books are banned because of what they say or allegedly say, and content-neutral, in which books are restricted because they are not sent through accepted channels. In Maine, Michigan and other states, prisoners may only receive books through a select number of vendors, whether Amazon.com, a local bookstore or an approved publisher.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States