Banned: How Censorship Impacts the First Amendment

Books have been challenged, censored, banned and burned for centuries.

From the World Economic Forum : “The burning of books, for instance, has long been used to send a powerful political message. Four months into Hitler’s regime, over 25,000 books were burnt in Munich because they were considered ‘unGerman.’” Learn more about this dark time in history here .

Sometimes argument over censorship has ended up in court. Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence was banned in the UK until 1960 when the publishers won the right to publish the novel after a famous court case . On the first day of publication, 200,000 copies were purchased.

Even books that have been sitting on bookshelves for years can come under scrutiny. At Royal Holloway, University of London, Fanny Hill, one of the oldest erotic novels in the English language (which had been taught at the university for a long time) was dropped after a consultation with students because of its “pornographic content.”

Back in 1982, so many books were being challenged in the US that a number of organizations came together to start Banned Books Week, both to highlight the fact that literature was being banned, and to celebrate the freedom to read.

The American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom dedicates much of its work to advocate for banned and challenged books. From compiling lists of frequently challenged books each year to the creation of an online form where anyone can report censorship , the freedom to read is at the forefront of the organization.

Want to learn more about censorship’s many forms within our society, and how we can advocate for our First Amendment freedoms?