Evidence Summary
Americans’
Tolerance of Racist Materials in Public Libraries Remained Steady between
1976-2006
A Review of:
Burke,
S. K. (2010). Social tolerance and racist materials in public libraries. Reference and User Services Quarterly,
49(4), 369-379.
Reviewed by:
Leslie
Bussert
Head
of Instruction / Literature and Humanities Research and Instruction Librarian
Cascadia
Community College Campus Library
University
of Washington Bothell
Bothell,
Washington, United States of America
Email:
lbussert@uwb.edu
Received: 1
Dec. 2011 Accepted: 28 Jan. 2012
2012 Bussert. This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons- Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike
License 2.5 Canada (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ca/), which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial purposes, and, if
transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the same or similar
license to this one.
Abstract
Objective –
To determine the general public’s levels of social tolerance toward public
library materials containing racist content in order to present opinion data to
librarians within a framework of scholarly perspectives that they can use for
making decisions about intellectual freedom and controversial materials in
libraries.
Design –
Percentage and regression analysis of the General Social Survey longitudinal
trend study dataset.
Setting –
United States, 1976-2006.
Subjects –
Random samples of 26,798 primarily English-speaking adults aged 18 and up.
Methods –
The author analyzed responses from the well-respected and frequently used
General Social Survey (GSS), which has been conducted by the National Opinion
Research Center since 1972. The GSS is a closed-ended survey including a
variety of demographic measures. Between the years 1976 and 2006, it also
included a question to gauge the support of removing a book with racist beliefs
about African Americans from the public library. The surveys were conducted
irregularly over this thirty-year span, and in total the question was asked
nineteen times garnering 26,798 responses. Spanish speakers were not included
until 2006.
The
author examined the data in multilevel cross-tabulations using percentages, and
calculated chi-square for independence using frequencies. A multiple regression
analysis was conducted to determine the predictive value of the independent
variables examined on opinions of book removal. The author examined different
variables, including education level, race, age, parental status, sex,
geographic factors, religious affiliation, political party, and political
conservatism. Occupation was not used in the regression analysis because sample
sizes in some categories were too small. The two ordinal variables, age and
education level, were available as ratio level data that are most appropriate
for regression calculations.
Due
to the large sample size, very small differences in percentages are significant
at the .000 level. In these cases the author made judgment as to whether these
differences were meaningful, or divided the data into multi-layer
cross-tabulations to reduce the sample size and make the significance test more
informative.
Main Results –
Analysis revealed the most influential predictors of support for book removal
from the public library were education level, religious affiliation, and race.
Age was particularly influential for older respondents, while occupation and
living in the South were moderately influential. Variables with only slight
correlations to support of book removal included political party affiliation
and conservatism, parental status, and sex.
Across
all years of the study only 35.3% of respondents supported removal of racist
materials from the public library. Levels of support only changed slightly over
the decades: in 1976, 38.1% supported removal while in 2006 only 34.5% did.
The
mean age of respondents was 44.1 years and the median was 42 years. Respondents
over 57 years old were more likely to support removal (43.5%) compared to
younger ages whose support ranged from 31.1–34.1%. The largest change over time
was seen from respondents 57 years and older, whose support for removal dropped
in later years of the study.
Education
level had a strong impact on opinions; the lower one’s education level, the
higher their support for removal of the racist book from the public library. Of
those with less than a high school degree, 50.6% supported removal versus 35.8%
of high school diploma holders. Respondents with junior college, bachelor’s,
and graduate degrees supported removal at 29.2%, 20.5%, and 15.3%,
respectively. Over time, those with high school degrees maintained their level
of support for removal while those with higher levels of education increased
their support for removal.
Race
was strongly related to opinions on removing offensive items from the library.
While half of African American respondents supported removing a racist book,
only one-third of white respondents did. However, in all but a few
subcategories of analysis, the majority of African Americans did not support
removal, indicating a great deal of social tolerance on their part despite the
possibility of being more sensitive to the implications of having racist
materials in the library. When cross-tabulated with education level, the same
pattern of support for removal was reproduced. There was little variation over
time in white respondent’s opinions while African Americans’ varied slightly.
Geographic
factors affected opinions supporting removal of racist materials, though place
size only had a small impact on opinions. Respondents in the South were most
likely to support removal (42.1%) and those in New England were least likely
(25.2%). About one-third of respondents from the Midwest (33%), Mid-Atlantic
(36%), and the West (29.8%) supported removal. Opinions over time remained the
same in all regions but the South, whose support of removal dropped to 38.8%.
Religion
was found to correlate with opinions on removing racist books from the library.
Protestants showed the highest level of support for removal (39.5%), followed
by Catholics (32.3%), Jews (21.7%), and respondents unaffiliated with religion
(20.5%). Race had a strong impact within some religions on supporting removal,
particularly among Methodists and those claiming no religion. When opinions by
religion were cross-tabulated with education level, at every level Baptists
were more likely to support removal than other groups, while Jews and those
without religious affiliation were least likely.
Other
demographic variables had little effect on opinions concerning removal of
racist materials from the library. Parents supported removal (37%) while
nonparents were less likely to (30%), and men and women were almost equally
likely to support removal (33% and 37% respectively). Political affiliation and
level of conservatism only showed slight effects on opinions supporting
removal. By a small margin Democrats were most likely to support removal
(39.2%) followed by Republicans (34%) and independents (32.5%). Across the
conservatism spectrum, moderates were most likely to support removal (37.7%)
followed by conservatives (36.4%) and liberals (29.9%).
The
author also examined whether a respondent’s occupation influenced their
opinions and focused this inquiry on the professions of library workers and
educators. Librarians were overwhelmingly against removal of racist materials
while library paraprofessionals were less likely to support it than other
workers with a similar level of education. College and university teachers in
disciplines other than library and information science were divided but in
comparison to other similarly educated professions they were less likely to
support removal. School teachers were significantly more likely to support
removal than other occupations also requiring a bachelor’s degree.
When
contrasted with controversial materials of other types, such as those by openly
homosexual or communist authors, different patterns of support for removal over
time were observed. Support for removal of books by homosexuals and communists
declined significantly over the decades. Similar to the support of the removal
of racist materials, education and religious affiliation were the variables
most highly correlated to support of removal of these other types of
controversial books.
Conclusion –
The discomfort among Americans over the free expression of exclusionary speech
about African Americans remained relatively consistent over the years of the
study (1976 – 2006) despite some shifts within particular demographic
categories. Tolerance toward free expression by homosexuals and communists
increased over time, demonstrating exclusionary speech may be perceived as a
different type of social threat. Librarians can use this information to: better
understand how non-librarians view intellectual freedom in the context of
materials with offensive content; inform collection development decisions and
predict likelihood of challenges based on the demographics of their user
communities; and to educate the public and library stakeholders of the
implications of challenging these kinds of items within a library’s collection
through upholding their professional values. Librarians should continue to
serve their communities by acting as champions of intellectual freedom and to
uphold the profession’s rigorous standards. The author suggests future research
could: address attitudes about materials with racist views of populations other
than African Americans; look for differences in opinions among library users
versus non-users; and differentiate between adult and children’s materials
containing controversial topics.
Commentary
This
study offers thorough analysis of a longitudinal dataset spanning thirty years
and covering a variety of variables potentially impacting opinions on removing
books from public libraries. The literature review includes other disciplines,
such as speech communications, public policy, and race studies, for broader
context.
Limitations
of the study are acknowledged and based in the dataset itself. For example,
African Americans are the only race included in the survey prompt analyzed. The
author
concedes
additional questions would be necessary for a comprehensive analysis from the
library and information science perspective, and recognizes one’s opinions do
not necessarily correlate to action.
The
brief summary of data from related GSS survey prompts about support for removal
of homosexual or communist materials is valuable, as it helps identify whether
opinions on racist books translate to other types of controversial materials,
and in this case they did not. This comparison could be expanded by also
analyzing the GSS data about removal of socialist or militarist materials and
more recent prompts about books by anti-American Muslim clergymen and general
anti-religious materials (ICPSR, 2011a, 2011b).
The
author’s findings are also illuminated when placed within the broader study of
censorship and social tolerance. Boyer (2002) has traced shifting patterns of
book censorship in American legal and cultural history allowing for further contextualization
of these findings. Meanwhile, Harell’s (2007, 2010) work examines the effects
and consequences diverse democratic societies have on social tolerance and how
exposure to social diversity impacts attitudes toward exclusionary speech. Like
Burke (2010), Harell also presents evidence that individuals are less likely to
tolerate exclusionary speech compared to other controversial speech, and argues
it is because exposure to social diversity increases empathy toward the victims
of such speech (2007). This may help explain why individuals with more
education, along with college professors or librarians, were more tolerant of
racist materials in libraries. Perhaps exposure to diverse ideas and people via
education also impact one’s tolerance for exclusionary speech. However,
librarian opposition to removal of racist materials exceeded all other
educators, indicating they are stronger advocates for free speech.
The
findings of this study reaffirm the profession’s stance on intellectual freedom
and the author offers several useful ideas for applying them to practice.
Additional ideas for future research include revisiting the GSS data over time
for additional analysis and collecting opinions on this issue from non-English
speaking populations across the United States.
References
Boyer, P. S. (2002). Purity in print: Book censorship in America from the gilded age to
the computer Age. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
Burke, S. K. (2010). Social tolerance and racist
materials in public libraries. Reference
& User Services Quarterl,y 49(4), 369-379.
Harell, A. (30 Aug 2007). Tolerance judgments in multicultural democracies: Target groups and the
role of social diversity. American Political Science Association Annual
meeting, Hyatt Regency Chicago and the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers,
Chicago, IL, USA. Retrieved 11 Jan 2011 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p209670_index.html
Harell, A. (2010). The limits of social tolerance
in diverse societies: Hate speech and political tolerance norms among young
youth. Canadian Journal of Political
Science, 43(2), 407-432. doi: 10.1017/S000842391000003X
Inter-University Consortium for Political and
Social Research (ICPSR). (2011). General Social Survey, 1972-2006 [Data file].
Available from http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/access/index.jsp
Inter-University
Consortium for Political and
Social
Research (ICPSR). (2011). General Social Survey, 1972-2008 [Data file].
Available from http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/access/index.jsp