Irvine teacher's book censoring a study in irony
DATE 04/10/92
NEWSPAPER THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
SECTION NEWS
EDITION MORNING
PAGE a01
STORY LENGTH 21 INCHES
HEADLINE Irvine teacher's book censoring a study in irony
BYLINE/CREDIT Dan Froomkin: The Orange County Register
SUBJECT TERMS SCHOOLS:FACULTY:BOOKS:CENSORSHIP:UNUSUAL:OC
A teacher at Venado Middle School recently assigned her
eighth-graders to read "Fahrenheit 451," Ray Bradbury's classic
novel about book-burning and the suppression of ideas.
But the book had been censored before it was passed out.
Students in Joan Dann's gifted English classes received copies
of the book with scores of words -- mostly hells and damns -- blacked
out.
"(Dann) said she believed a story could be told without having
those kinds of words in it," said eighth-grader Kong Chan, 13.
Several students and parents have objected.
"The way Mrs. Dann is censoring the book is kind of going
against the book's whole philosophy," said eighth-grader Paul
Ledesma.
"Fahrenheit 451" is a science-fiction novel about a society in
which firefighters burn down people's houses for the crime of
possessing books. It is about a society in which the leaders control
people by controlling information.
"It's hard to tell a child that education is open and everything
like that and (then) they get a book and it's all blacked out,"
said Charlotte Simmons, who has a daughter in Dann's class.
Dann, 42, did not return phone calls.
After being contacted by the Register, school officials said
Thursday that the censored copies will no longer be used.
"I don't think that we should go through a book and mark things
out," Venado Principal Bob Bruce said.
"It won't happen in the future," said Irvine Unified School
District Superintendent David Brown.
Did Brown sense the irony involved? Yes, he said. "It's huge.
That's what the book was all about."
Students said Dann didn't black out the words herself. She told
them that when she first received the books several years ago, she
asked the class to cross out profanity as they read.
Students didn't know how long Dann has been using the
blacked-out books, which were printed in 1986. Bruce said this is
the first time parents have complained to him.
But this is not the first time "Fahrenheit 451" -- named for the
temperature at which paper burns -- has been censored. In a 1979
afterword to the book, Bradbury wrote that the publishers censored
several sections themselves.
Bradbury called that act an "exquisite irony," and demanded that
the book be republished "with all the damns and hells back in
place."
He added, "There is more than one way to burn a book."
Students said Dann read parts of the afterword to the class.
"She said she thinks Bradbury's an excellent writer, but she
doesn't agree with him, which really blew me away," Ledesma said.
"I literally almost fell over in my chair."
Another irony of the incident is that Dann's effort to shield
students from the profanity failed. Several said they went to a lot
of effort to read each blacked-out word.
"You're really curious to find out what word it was," Chan said.
Chris Stanley, 14, examined a pile of the books before they were
passed out -- and found one without any words crossed out.
"I wanted to see what kind of words there were in it. I thought
there would be really bad words, but there aren't," Stanley said.
"We're eighth-graders," he said. "Those words are used in
everyday speech. They're words that they use in church."
Having an unblemished copy presented Stanley with a dilemma.
"(Dann) told us if we didn't have one where all the words were
crossed out, to go ahead and cross them out."
But after thinking about it, Stanley made up his mind. "I'm not
going to," he said.