I'm a Public-School English Teacher. The Most Vocal Defenders of K–12 Liberal Arts Are Not Who You'd Expect.

Slate 

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. On May 6, the Texas House Committee on Public Education discussed S.B. 13, a bill seeking to remove from public school libraries and classrooms all "profane" and "indecent content." At the hearing, Republican Rep. Terri Leo-Wilson focused on the concern that the legislation could harm the transmission of cultural heritage by depriving students of "classics." She explained, using an adjective that in our current culture wars has come to describe a type of humanities education favored by conservatives, that her "kids were classically trained, so they had their graduation picture with all sorts of books … classic works of literature." When an activist commenting during the hearing remarked that among renowned writers, Toni Morrison's work is singularly "very sexualized," Leo-Wilson replied, without reference to any one book, "She might be famous, but that's not considered, I don't think, a classic."

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