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In reply to the discussion: College Students Refuse To Read Award-Winning Novel Because It Violates Their Christian Beliefs [View all]tabasco
(22,974 posts)118. Perhaps you missed the first sentence in the linked article:
Here, I made it easier to read for you:
[font size=4]Some freshmen students at Duke University are protesting the assignment of Fun Home, claiming reading it would violate their Christian beliefs.[/font]
They are protesting that the book was on the list. They want the university to "disappear" the book. They are crying about it on Facebook and in letters to newspapers. So, yes the innocent little darlings are infringing on others' right to a well-rounded education.
Now, more right-wing crazies are getting involved.
However, a conservative think tank argues the graphic novel has content too graphic for college freshmen.
...
South Carolina lawmakers threatened to cut funding at the College of Charleston two years ago when the book was put on a summer reading list.
Duke, a private university, issued the following statement about the book selection: "We do understand that the novel may make some readers uncomfortable. It may create arguments and conversations, which are important to a liberal arts education.
http://www.wral.com/controversial-summer-reading-assignment-raises-concerns-at-duke/14713290/
Good on Duke for standing up to these intolerant Puritan wannabes.
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College Students Refuse To Read Award-Winning Novel Because It Violates Their Christian Beliefs [View all]
riversedge
Aug 2015
OP
At least they're merely abstaining. The current trend is for social media mobs to demand censorship.
Nuclear Unicorn
Aug 2015
#5
Fail the course, period! In college, you are supposed to be adults, developing critical thought! nt
TheBlackAdder
Aug 2015
#79
"Christians" define themselves by their level of insulation from "the gay"
Betty Karlson
Aug 2015
#108
"In its review, the New York Times called it 'a comic book for lovers of words.'”
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2015
#49
Science fiction was also called "s/f," "sci-fi" and "scientifiction," while we're at it.
Orrex
Aug 2015
#103
TY for the link. I have Maus and In The Shadow of No Towers by Spiegelman, also Persepolis....
Hekate
Aug 2015
#139
Yes, because all must conform to received wisdom -- especially at college.
Nuclear Unicorn
Aug 2015
#7
They bastardize the virtue of tolerance to enforce the vice of their own tribalism. nt
Nuclear Unicorn
Aug 2015
#97
What on earth? This isn't coursework, it's a sexually explicit novel assigned to incoming freshmen
Yo_Mama
Aug 2015
#132
Exactly. College professors already lament incoming students have poor writing skills
KittyWampus
Aug 2015
#12
In college, I once withheld my "homework" in musical composition because I felt it was inferior.
no_hypocrisy
Aug 2015
#14
Trying and failing. Taking your "lumps". That's how you learn. I am really good
KittyWampus
Aug 2015
#44
If you are going to go to a college it is a good idea to read the books that your college wants you
Botany
Aug 2015
#80
Because it's interesting when people pay to go to college presumably to get a well-rounded education
tabasco
Aug 2015
#116
it's their right to fail a class, yes, they don't have a right to get a passing grade
geek tragedy
Aug 2015
#77
How does their not reading a book deprive others of the ability to read the book?
Nuclear Unicorn
Aug 2015
#84
Giving critical thought to a subject they are unfamiliar with violates their beliefs?
Initech
Aug 2015
#76
...to tick off the box labeled credentials and to keep their unquestioning faith intact...?
xocet
Aug 2015
#88
well, no "duke did not seem to have people like "you" in mind." of course not. this university
niyad
Aug 2015
#98
These kids are right, they should stick to reading books in which no one sins. Here's a list:
dakota_democrat
Aug 2015
#101
The five words that validate homophobia, bigotry, sexism, intolerance and ignorance while
Feeling the Bern
Aug 2015
#110
They can live however they want, but if they refuse to do the work required or recommended...
Humanist_Activist
Aug 2015
#143
Which makes such material more valuable it allows them to open up to new experiences and how...
Humanist_Activist
Aug 2015
#153
"Christians" who rely on ignorance and never being challenged are weak in faith
Hekate
Aug 2015
#140
As a sophomore in high school, a racist classmate refused to read "Black Like Me."
David__77
Aug 2015
#154
"Freshman Daughter Drop-off" sign banned. "Freshman Daughter Reading List" okay. WTF?
WinkyDink
Aug 2015
#159