From Portside Culture <[email protected]>
Subject How a Debut Graphic Memoir Became the Most Banned Book in the Country
Date September 22, 2022 1:00 AM
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[Maia Kobabe’s book, “Gender Queer,” was the most banned
book in the U.S. in 2021, a year in which bans and challenges soared.
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PORTSIDE CULTURE

HOW A DEBUT GRAPHIC MEMOIR BECAME THE MOST BANNED BOOK IN THE COUNTRY
 
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Alexandra Alter
May 1, 2022
The New York Times
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_ Maia Kobabe’s book, “Gender Queer,” was the most banned book
in the U.S. in 2021, a year in which bans and challenges soared. _

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_Gender Queer: A Memoir_
Maia Kobabe
Oni Press
ISBN13: 9781549304002

Coming out as bisexual in high school had been relatively easy: Maia
Kobabe lived in the liberal San Francisco Bay Area and had supportive
classmates and parents. But coming out as nonbinary years later, in
2016, was far more complicated, Kobabe said. The words available
failed to describe the experience.

“There wasn’t this language for it,” said Kobabe, 33, who now
uses gender-neutral pronouns and doesn’t identify as male or female.
“I just thought, I am wanting to come out as nonbinary, and I am
struggling with how to bring this up in conversation with people. And
even when I am able to start a conversation about it, I feel like I am
never fully able to get my point across.”

So Kobabe, an illustrator who still lives in the Bay Area, started
drawing black-and-white comics about wrestling with gender identity,
and posting them on Instagram. “People started responding with
things like, ‘I had no idea anyone else felt this way, I didn’t
even know that there were words for this’,” Kobabe said.

Kobabe expanded the material into a graphic memoir, “Gender
Queer,” which was released in 2019 by a comic book and graphic novel
publisher. The print run was small — 5,000 copies — and Kobabe
worried that the book wouldn’t find much readership.

Then, last year, the book’s frank grappling with gender identity and
sexuality began generating headlines around the country. Dozens of
schools pulled it from library shelves. Republican officials in North
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and South Carolina, Texas and Virginia called for the book’s
removal, sometimes labeling it “pornographic.”

Suddenly, Kobabe was at the center of a nationwide battle over which
books belong in schools — and who gets to make that decision. The
debate, raging in school board meetings and town halls, is dividing
communities around the country and pushing libraries to the front
lines of a simmering culture war. And in 2021, when book banning
efforts soared, “Gender Queer” became the most challenged book
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in the United States, according to the American Library Association
and the free speech organization PEN.

Many of the titles that have been challenged or banned recently are by
or about Black and L.G.B.T.Q. people, both groups said.

“‘Gender Queer’ ends up at the center of this because it is a
graphic novel, and because it is dealing with sexuality at the time
when that’s become taboo,” said Jonathan Friedman, the director of
free expression and education at PEN America. “There’s definitely
an element of anti L.G.B.T.Q.+ backlash.”

The Push to Ban Books Across America
Parents, activists, school board officials and lawmakers are
increasingly contesting children’s access to books.

* NATIONWIDE EFFORTS: Amid growing polarization, books exploring
racial and social issues are drawing fire
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different parts of the United States.
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* GROWING RAPIDLY: Attempts to ban books are accelerating at a rate
never seen
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tracking began more than 20 years ago, according to a new report from
the American Library Association.
* CASE DISMISSED: A judge in Virginia dismissed an attempt to block
Barnes & Noble and other bookstores
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selling to minors two books that contained sexual content.
* LIBRARIANS UNDER ATTACK: As book bans explode across the country
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librarians find themselves on the front lines of an acrimonious
culture war
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with their careers and reputations at risk.

Some who have lobbied to have the memoir removed from schools say they
have no issue with the author’s story or identity. It’s the sexual
content in “Gender Queer” that is not appropriate for children or
school libraries, they say.

“It’s not a First Amendment issue, this is not going against
L.G.B.T.Q. groups, we’re citing it for sexually explicit content,”
said Jennifer Pippin, a nurse in Sebastian, Fla., and the chairman of
Moms for Liberty in Indian River County, where “Gender Queer” was
banned from school libraries last fall after Pippin filed a complaint.

The recent spike in book challenges
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has been amplified by growing political polarization, as conservative
groups and politicians have focused on titles about race, gender and
sexuality, and framed book banning as a matter of parental choice.
Liberal groups, free speech organizations, library associations and
some student and parent activists have argued that banning titles
because some parents object to them is a violation of students’
rights.

The American Library Association counted challenges against 1,597
individual books last year, the highest number since the group began
tracking book bans 20 years ago. In many cases, the titles that have
been pulled aren’t mandatory reading, but are simply available on
library shelves.

Several factors made “Gender Queer” a target.

It’s a graphic memoir that deals with puberty and sexual identity,
and includes a few drawings of nude characters and sexual scenarios
— images that critics of the book were able to share on social media
to stoke a backlash. The book explores the author’s discomfort with
traditional gender roles, and features depictions of masturbation,
period blood and confusing sexual experiences.

And it arrived in the middle of a politically and emotionally charged
debate about gender identity and transgender rights, as Republican
elected officials in Texas
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Florida
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and elsewhere have put forward legislation that would criminalize
providing medically accepted treatment to transgender children, or ban
discussions of gender identity and sexuality in some elementary school
grades.

Being caught in the middle of a nationwide controversy has been
unnerving for Kobabe, who has expressed concern about the impact the
bans might have on young people who are questioning their identity.

“When you remove those books from the shelf or you challenge them
publicly in a community, what you’re saying to any young person who
identified with that narrative is, ‘We don’t want your story
here’,” Kobabe said.

Kobabe, who was raised as a girl, started questioning that identity as
a child. Once, during a field trip in the third grade, Kobabe went
topless to play in a river, and was scolded by a teacher. Another
time, Kobabe was secretly happy when another child in elementary
school yelled, “What even are you, a boy or a girl?”

Kobabe found solace in drawing, David Bowie songs and fantasy series
like “Harry Potter” and “Lord of the Rings,” and developed
crushes on both boys and girls.

Puberty was bewildering and traumatic. “I don’t want to be a girl.
I don’t want to be a boy either. I just want to be myself,” Kobabe
wrote in a diary at age 15.

In 2016, Kobabe began coming out to friends and family as nonbinary,
and using the gender neutral pronouns e, eir and em. Kobabe’s
parents, both teachers, were supportive, but also confused at times.
To explain what it felt like to be nonbinary, Kobabe started drawing
the images that eventually became the basis for “Gender Queer.”

Kobabe imagined the memoir would appeal mainly to young adults who had
also wrestled with gender identity, and to friends and family of
nonbinary people. The book’s publisher, Lion Forge, marketed it
toward older teens and adults. But it soon found a younger audience.
In 2020, it won an Alex Award, a prize given by the American Library
Association to books written for adults that hold “special appeal to
young adults, ages 12 through 18.”

The award brought “Gender Queer” to the attention of librarians
across the country, who often look to such
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prizes when deciding what books to order. High schools and some middle
school libraries around the country began stocking it. Currently, on
Amazon, it’s listed as appropriate for ages 18 and up; on Barnes &
Noble’s website, it’s recommended for readers 15 and older.

One night in September, Kobabe was tagged in an Instagram post linking
to a viral video of an irate mother denouncing the book as pornography
at a school board meeting in Fairfax County, Va.

“I was like, ‘Well, this is disappointing and a bummer, but I
don’t need to give this my attention,’” Kobabe said. “And then
it just snowballed.”

Many of the book’s critics seized on a handful of explicit images
that illustrate Kobabe’s evolving understanding of gender and
sexuality as a teenager and young adult, including a drawing of Kobabe
and a girlfriend experimenting with a strap-on sex toy, and another of
Kobabe fantasizing about two men having sex.

The book was banned in dozens of school districts and removed from
libraries across the country, including Alaska, Iowa, Texas and
Pennsylvania. In some schools, it was pulled preemptively, without a
formal complaint. It became a talking point for prominent Republican
officials, among them Glenn Youngkin, now governor of Virginia, Gov.
Ron DeSantis
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of Florida and Gov. Henry McMaster of South Carolina, who called it
“obscene and pornographic
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“likely illegal.”

It appeared on a list of books deemed sexually explicit that was
circulated among members of Moms for Liberty, a nonprofit formed in
2021 to push for “parental rights in schools” that has been
helping to drive book banning efforts. Pippin first heard of “Gender
Queer” when she saw it listed on the group’s Facebook page in
October. She searched for it in her school library system and found
there were copies in multiple middle schools and high schools,
including the schools that her 13- and 17-year-old children attend,
she said.

“Any 10- or 17-year-old could just check out that book,” Pippin
said. “This could do damage to children if they don’t know
what’s in it.”

She made a complaint to the school board, and shortly after, the book
was removed. After a review, it was permanently banned.

In some communities, divisions over “Gender Queer” have been deep
and painful.

This spring, after a member of Moms For Liberty submitted a complaint
about “Gender Queer” to the Wappingers Central School District in
upstate New York, the book was removed from a high school library. It
had never been checked out. A committee of teachers, parents and
educators reviewed it, and determined that it was not inappropriate
and should be returned. The superintendent, citing sexually explicit
images, overruled the committee and brought the issue to the school
board, which voted unanimously to uphold the ban.

At a recent school board meeting, a group of students and parents
denounced the ban, with one person arguing the book could be a
lifeline for young people who are exploring gender identity and whose
families are unsupportive. Others called the book pornographic and
inappropriate.

Mandy Zhang, an 11th grader in the district, said banning “Gender
Queer” sent a harmful message to gay, transgender and nonbinary
students.

“People in the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community and in minority groups use
these books as an outlet, and a way to connect to the world to feel
support,” Zhang said at the school board meeting. “This book ban
silenced these groups, these people, resulting in making them not feel
valid.”

Zhang started a petition to reverse the ban, and within a week got
more than 1,000 signatures. She’s starting a banned book club at her
local library and is planning a fund-raiser to buy and distribute free
copies of “Gender Queer.” But in her school district’s
libraries, the book is no longer available.

* memoir
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* U.S. literature
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* Banned Books
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* Human Rights
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* LGBTQ writers
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* Right Wing Politics
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