A recent popular
question has surfaced the youth of America. That question is, should some young
adult fiction books be banned? Well, some YA fiction books should be challenged
by adults and teachers, because the themes and topics that are discussed in YA
fiction are to gruesome, images and descriptions of books are to grueling to
look and imagine and they give thoughts to the kids reading it.
The
first reason YA fiction books should be allowed to be challenged by adults is
because the content is gruesome. For example, according to the article
“Darkness Too Visible” by Megan Cox Gurdon “So dark that kidnapping and
pederasty and incest and brutal beatings are just part of the run of things in
novels directed, broadly speaking, at children from the ages of 12 to 18.” All of
these topics and themes are in YA fiction nowadays. All of these topics that
adults don’t even talk about normally, are being introduced at age 12 to young
adolescents that are making the switch from fairytales, short stories and kids
books to the horrid YA fiction realm. These are not all of the topics that are
far more grueling ones such as murder, drugs, rape, sex, and etc. All of these
topics sound like things from a police report. Aside from these horrid topics
YA fiction is filled with profanity. According to the article “Should Young
Adult Books Have Age Ratings?” by Husna Haq “ A recent study by Brigham Young
University found that young adult bestsellers have twice the rate of cursing of
video games and characters who swear are typically portrayed as wealthier, more
attractive, and more popular than their clean-mouthed counterparts.” Which
means we are letting our children read lines and lines of dialogue filled with
words that if our kids said we would ground them. So what’s the point of
protecting our kids from video games that contain violent topics and profanity,
if they are already reading this in books?
Another
reason for challenging certain YA books is that they contain vivid descriptions
and images of grueling things. “stomach clenching detail” (Gurdon 1) is the
descriptions they give. These so called “book” descriptions sound like excerpts
from horror movies rated R. For example in the book “The Hunger Games” kids are
forced to murder each other with weapons until one is left alive for entertainment.
Also in the book “Tweak” by Nic Sheff which about a young man who struggles with substance abuse
and is high on drugs like meth and heroin and likes to live the wild life
having sex with girls and not caring about his health. Kids have vivid imagination.
I could only imagine what kids would picture once they read about kids killing
other kids, or a needle in someone’s arm injecting drugs into their veins. Some
parts of books are very detailed descriptions that are inappropriate. For
example in the various YA books such as again “The Hunger Games”, “Legend” by
Marie Lu and “Divergent” there are description of death that are very detailed.
Finally
challenging YA books should be allowed without question is because it leaves
kids with bad thoughts. Other people may think that people that are going
through a bad time and have problems will find comfort and will be inspired by
reading the same thing in YA fiction. One person is Sherman Alexie who wrote
the article “Why the Best Kids Books Are Written in Blood” which he states that
his YA book has “inspired students” because “it was the student speakers who
told the most important stories about survival.” While this is kind of true
some kids that are struggling find comfort and are inspired after reading a YA
book others don’t. Some kids might get the wrong idea. For example if a child
were to read a book about drugs and they saw that no matter how much harm he
had gone through he had been happy with himself and his choices, the child
might think that drugs are good that they make you feel good which is not the
case. Kids are easily influenced by what they hear and see. A bigger influence
is their books. Not everyone is influenced the same way. We are all different
people. Also Patrick Ness says that “Teenagers look at the Internet, they look
at the news, they look at pornography on the internet, they look at violent
movies on the Internet.” Yes this is true teens are aware of all of these
things but why are we addressing them more? Shouldn’t we prevent them from at
least reading about these things. Also not all of the demographic is for
teens. More kids are reading YA.
Shouldn’t adults have the right to protect them?
In
conclusion YA books should be challenged without question because they portray
gruesome and inappropriate themes and topics, their descriptions and images are
gruesome and they leave negative thoughts. This debate could go on and on but
it all goes down to the point where if kids can be protected from reading these
things at such a young age, then they should be.
Great job! The first thing that really pulled me into your essay was your first sentence, "A recent popular question has surfaced the youth of America". This sentence really grabbed me and made me want to read on. The way you say "the youth of America" makes the topic seem really serious and worth reading more about. Another thing that you did well, was using the different articles we used in class, to back up your opinion. For example, in the first paragraph you start by talking about the Gurdon article, then you give examples by talking about the Husna Haq article. This was really good!
ReplyDeletep.s. your word choice was also really good :)