Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Banning Books in High School Libraries. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper addresses a local school board and tries to persuade members not to ban any books. Several issues are addresses including violent content, sexuality, racism and the difference between literature and other types of objectionable works. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA013ban.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
it solves problems. First, what is the problem? The primary difficulty that the school board has is that certain books are not considered appropriate for those who attend high school.
The reasons are many. Some have suggested that the material is too "racy" or that it addresses religious issues such as speaking of the Devil. On the religious front, some
of the works purportedly contain references to New Age practices and there are objections to that. Also, another problem is that some of the older literature contains racist verbiage.
Also, objections sometimes pertain to violent content. While one would think that as the twenty-first century begins, most anything would be appropriate for Generation Y, the scrutiny of books is
greater than ever (Zielinski V07). One reason is due to the increase in school violence. Fro example, the book called The Chocolate War, " a work about a
student who will not participate in a chocolate sale at his school and is persecuted by the schools secret society, is often one that schools do not like (V07).
One can see that because much of the real school violence that surfaces today surrounds incidents where children are ostracized from the majority, schools will want such material out of
their buildings. They fear that students will imitate some of the things in the book. At least, whenever a violent incident happens in real life, people point their finger at
literature. But the truth is that literature reflects life and the fact that one disturbed child may copy something they read, see or hear should not instigate a ban on
books. The reason is simple. There would be no end to it. All great works have conflict, even books meant for very young children. Without conflict, which often contains violence,
...