Current:Home > NewsBanned Books: Author Susan Kuklin on telling stories that inform understanding -Ascend Finance Compass
Banned Books: Author Susan Kuklin on telling stories that inform understanding
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-11 04:41:21
This discussion with Susan Kuklin is part of a series of interviews with — and essays by — authors who are finding their books being challenged and banned in the U.S.
Writer and photographer Susan Kuklin is the author of the award-winning nonfiction book, Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out. The book is banned from school library shelves in 11 school districts in the U.S.
The book compiles Kuklin's photos of — and interviews with — transgender and nonbinary teens and young adults. The stories these teens tell are raw and heartfelt. They describe their experiences transitioning and reflect on their identities.
Kuklin's work often focuses on human rights issues; she has written about topics ranging from immigration to the AIDS epidemic. Beyond Magenta, published in 2014, has been on the American Library Association's (ALA) list of most books most often challenged a number of times since 2015, cited for "for LGBTQIA+ content and because it was considered to be sexually explicit."
The interview below has been edited for length and clarity.
Interview highlights
On how everyone is human
When I was talking to various people about whether or not I should be doing the book and what are some of the issues that needed to be addressed. I was uncomfortable, when I didn't know what the sex of the person was. It just felt strange to me and I thought, why should it feel strange to me? Would I be speaking differently to a man than to a woman? It just didn't sit right. And I thought, are we hard wired to believe this? And so I went on a quest to find out if indeed we were hard wired. And I found that we're not. Because very quickly, once I got to know people, it became totally irrelevant... people are people. And that's the point of all my books that people are people and they do some crazy things, some negative things, some positive things, and that's who we are.
On Beyond Magenta being challenged
It's kind of awful, frankly. When I think about it. I think... here are these kids whose main reason was to... control their own narrative. And they're really good kids. They're nice kids. And my whole for doing this point was to start a conversation to bring humanity to the page, to show some empathy, to just be able to broaden ourselves. And instead the book is being vilified. Vilified because of who these people are.
On what it means to have a book banned vs. challenged
Well, banned and challenged are two different points. When you're challenged, a person, a parent, whoever goes to the school and fills out a form saying this book should not be in your library. That's the challenge. Banned is the actual removal of the book.
On what some people are objecting to in her book
Oddly, people are mostly complaining about things that have little to do with being transgender. So what they do is they'll pick a paragraph from the story, whether it's bad language — because kids curse — or whether it's a story of someone's life. They take it out of context, and then they turn — they complain about that, that the whole book should be banned and everything that's in it because of a paragraph here or a word there.
...people took [one] chapter and that story and turned it around into something very negative and very ugly. Whereas I saw it as an example of how someone can survive. I saw that chapter as someone who started — who was born into a terrible environment with lots of violence and very little education and managed to become a hero and live a successful life and go to college. To pretend that people like this do not exist is ridiculous because we know they do exist, and so their voices being heard could be very helpful.
On the importance of telling stories that inform understanding
Those kids are so important to me. They're just beautiful people. I think the one story that I appreciated a lot was a young trans woman who went to an all boys Catholic school in the Bronx. By her senior year she decided she was going to live her true life...she started a transition right there in school. She bucked an awful lot of bullying and teasing and stood her ground — and today is a beautiful artist and creative person and living a wonderful life. Also in that chapter, which was very important to me, was her mother, who was very much opposed to her becoming female — her transitioning. Her evolution from being frightened, scared, uninformed to an absolutely adoring parent is a beautiful story. The mother asked to be in the book. She said she wanted her point to be taken so that parents would know what they were feeling... getting concerned because of parental love. You love your child. You hear your child. You love your child.
Claire Murashima produced the broadcast version of this story. Meghan Collins Sullivan edited this story for the web.
veryGood! (963)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- 'Wicked' sing
- Fatal Hougang stabbing: Victim was mum of 3, moved to Singapore to provide for family
- Woman fired from Little India massage parlour arrested for smashing store's glass door
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Hougang murder: Victim was mum of 3, moved to Singapore to provide for family
- Joe Burrow’s home broken into during Monday Night Football in latest pro
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- 'Yellowstone' Season 5, Part 2: Here's when the final episode comes out and how to watch
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- How Hailee Steinfeld and Josh Allen Navigate Their Private Romance on Their Turf
- Man identifying himself as American Travis Timmerman found in Syria after being freed from prison
- The best tech gifts, gadgets for the holidays featured on 'The Today Show'
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Fatal Hougang stabbing: Victim was mum of 3, moved to Singapore to provide for family
- Trump names Andrew Ferguson as head of Federal Trade Commission to replace Lina Khan
- GM to retreat from robotaxis and stop funding its Cruise autonomous vehicle unit
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
PACCAR recalls over 220,000 trucks for safety system issue: See affected models
Fatal Hougang stabbing: Victim was mum of 3, moved to Singapore to provide for family
Trump names Andrew Ferguson as head of Federal Trade Commission to replace Lina Khan
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Ohio Supreme Court sides with pharmacies in appeal of $650 million opioid judgment
Arctic Tundra Shifts to Source of Climate Pollution, According to New Report Card
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast