JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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I do poorly at keeping resolutions. The spirit has always been
willing, but the flesh . . . well, you know. My record is so bad that I
quit making resolutions some years ago. Except for one. The only
resolution I can remember keeping is to avoid writing about Wendy Leece.
I haven’t done that for many months, partly because she was too easy a
target, partly because other people were dealing quite effectively with
her proposals, and partly because she is a decent and earnest human
being.
But the last few weeks were finally too much when she hit us with the
double whammy of creationism and book-banning. I let the creationism
issue pass because it was so well exploded by letters in the Daily Pilot
from Eleanor Egan and mathematician David Rector, as well as by columnist
Gay Geiser-Sandoval, that there was little I could add except a sigh.
A sigh -- and two quick points. First, it is always possible to find a
few credentialed scientists willing to support almost any
pseudoscientific concept such as creationism. If the creationists want to
play that game, then their arguments must be judged directly against the
stature and overwhelming number of scientists on the other side.
And, second, at the root of creationist efforts is the powerful need
of its proponents to intellectualize faith, to give it a veneer of
academic respectability. In short, to have it both ways. I spent a good
many years of my life trying to do this, and it doesn’t work. Physical
science and religious faith aren’t branches of the same tree, and efforts
to cross-pollinate them lead to hybrids of confusion and, sometimes,
absurdity. I’m not putting down faith at all. Just urging that it be
embraced where it belongs.
Censoring books, however, is an entirely different matter. It comes
very close to the skin -- and Leece, in her latest effort, has apparently
found another supporter on the school board.
For me, there’s a very simple bottom line. I don’t want anyone to tell
my children or grandchildren or anyone else’s children or grandchildren
what they can or cannot read. And, especially, I don’t want Wendy Leece
doing it, as I’m very sure she wouldn’t want me setting up a reading
program for her children.
The Newport-Mesa public schools have created a foolproof system for
parents to protect their children from exposure to books or films the
parents consider inappropriate. It’s called “positive permission slips,”
and it requires parents to return a form giving permission for their
children to study specific controversial material.
This makes it possible for children of parents without Leece’s fears
or concerns to be exposed to a breadth of creative work.
Censoring books deemed appropriate by the professionals who staff our
public schools would deny that opportunity to the great majority of
students. This right to read needs to be protected every bit as strongly
as the right of parents to deny such exposure to their own children.
I’ve read “Snow Falling on Cedars,” and it is beautifully crafted,
deeply felt writing that merits all of the awards it has received. To
nit-pick a piece of literature such as this on the basis of a few scenes
that make one segment of our society uncomfortable is to deny our
students exposure to fine writing for all the wrong reasons. I haven’t
read the Allende book, but both its pedigree and its critical accolades
are impressive.
People who read only the allegedly salacious passages and not the book
itself have no right to take a position. This is a work of creative art
that needs to be looked at whole and not in selected pieces. Objecting on
such grounds is rather like protecting children from viewing
Michelangelo’s David because of his exposed genitals. Or saying that
surely some other work of art could fill the same role without such
graphic depictions.
It puzzles and fascinates me that so-called conservatives, who pride
themselves on leading the fight against government interference in our
private lives, are at the forefront in telling us what we should allow
our children to read. The argument that they can go to a library and
check out these forbidden books simply ignores the fact that they are an
integrated part of a curriculum carefully crafted by their teachers.
We are dealing with two risks here: One, that students will be
arbitrarily exposed to books or films inappropriate to their age level;
or, two, that students will be denied exposure to fine creative work
because it is disturbing to an adult group with fears other adults don’t
share. The latter course denies this work to all students. The first
course denies it only to those students whose parents choose to opt out
for their children.
It seems to me the time has come for a little outrage on the part of
parents who strongly object to their children being deprived of fine
literature in the classroom by the aggressive action of religious
conservatives. For many years, they have had a corner on outrage -- and
they aren’t going to go away. So maybe the time has arrived for those who
are not afraid of creative breadth for their children to say: “Enough.”
Two of my children have enjoyed that creative breadth and outstanding
teachers at Newport Harbor High School. They have gone on to graduate
from fine universities. But even more importantly, they have embraced
good literature as a deep and satisfying part of their daily lives. It
would sadden and anger me to see today’s students denied that same
opportunity.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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