Bookshelf in City of Lisbon

Educational publisher Scholastic maintains its “Share Every Story, Celebrate Every Voice” offering is intended to keep school officials and librarians out of harm’s way in places where book banning laws and policies might put them in jeopardy, according to Andrew AlbanesePublishers Weekly executive editor.

Critics counter that segregating diverse books just paves the way for censorship, he tells me.

The controversy erupted on social media last month, when educators first raised concerns that Scholastic was requiring school fairs to opt into or out of the “Share Every Story, Celebrate Every Voice” showcase, which effectively gave school officials an option to eliminate a wide swath of titles that feature diverse identities – including BIPOC, LGBTQ, and disabled.

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“Scholastic insisted that it created the collection for U.S. elementary school book fairs as a way to continue providing diverse books, not to censor them,” Albanese reports.

This week, Scholastic Book Fair officials said it is a “misconception” that the company was “putting all diverse titles” into one “optional” case; instead, the company said, there is “a wide range of diverse titles throughout every book fair, for every age level.”

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Author: Christopher Kenneally

Christopher Kenneally hosted CCC's Velocity of Content podcast series for more than 18 years, organizing programs that addressed the business needs of all stakeholders in publishing and research. His reporting has appeared in the New York Times, Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, The Independent (London), WBUR-FM, NPR, and WGBH-TV.
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