Banned Books, Burned Books: Forbidden Literary Work | Anne Carroll Moore

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
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    Anne Carroll Moore advocated for children's reading in the early 20th century. Unfortunately, she was also a strict gatekeeper who fought against classics like Stuart Little and Charlotte's Web. Discover her legacy, for better or worse, in this first part of a two-part series. To see more about banned children's literature, click the button at the end of the video or follow this link: • Which Children's Class...
    This video is from the series Banned Books, Burned Books: Forbidden Literary Work, presented by Maureen Corrigan
    To learn more about banned books, visit www.wondrium.com
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    00:00 Anne Carroll Moore as a Gatekeeper of Children's Literature
    05:25 Moore's Opposition to Goodnight Moon
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Комментарии • 3

  • @sueswank433
    @sueswank433 25 дней назад

    That was really interesting!!!

  • @MsMiklosa
    @MsMiklosa 9 месяцев назад

    I’m soo glad I had millennial kids and that in Austria and in (very) Christian Poland where no books are banned. Banning and burning books was exercised in Hitler’s Germany but most of all in all communist countries like China and Soviet Russia. Authors who dared to describe political reality were stripped of their civil rights, dismissed from work, murdered, sent for decades to labour camps or thrown out of the country. I had no idea that in the American Free World books and authors are banned and discriminated. Tastes differ. I guess the books about XY men pretending to be XX women and than raping and impregnating fellow XX prisoners do not shock US librarians, schools, parents or any bodies involved.
    I watched all 24 parts of this interesting documentary and can only recommend it to all interested readers. If there are still any readers in America.

  • @HarHah
    @HarHah Год назад +1

    Sick and Jane