‘Roots’ Back in Knox County School Libraries

Following significant controversy over the removal of Alex Haley’s ‘Roots’ from library shelves in Knox County Schools, the district announced the book will be back – effective immediately.

WVLT reports:

Knox County Schools has reversed a decision to ban the Pulitzer Prize–winning novel “Roots: The Saga of an American Family” from all school library shelves.

KCS banned the book earlier this month under Tennessee’s Age-Appropriate Materials Act (AAMA), a state law that broadly restricts materials if they contain nudity, sexual abuse, sexual content or “excessive violence.”

District officials said the flagged section of “Roots” fell under “sadomasochistic abuse” as defined by state code. They emphasized that under changes to the law made in 2024, they were directed to evaluate only the specific passages flagged instead of the overall historical, cultural or literary value of the book.

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WATE TV in Knoxville reports that Alex Haley’s “Roots” has been pulled from Knox County Schools libraries.

Knox County Schools has banned “Roots,” a Pulitzer Prize-winning historical novel by Alex Haley that recounts the multi-generational struggle of his family, starting from the mid-Atlantic slave trade.

Under Tennessee’s Age-Appropriate Materials Act, parents can file a report if they believe classroom materials are inappropriate. KCS banned “Roots” because of Chapter 84, which describes the rape of an enslaved woman by a plantation owner.

“I do remember being a child and watching that miniseries with the world,” said Rev. Reneé Kesler, the president of the Beck Cultural Exchange Center. “There was a lot, and it was overwhelming, but I’ve never forgotten it.”

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