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UID:Indybay-39143
SEQUENCE:39143
CREATED:20040518T190200Z
DESCRIPTION:First Amendment Project  1736 Franklin Street, 9th Floor  Oakland, CA 94612 
  510-208-4555  510-208-4562 (fax)  http://www.thefirstamendment.org  EVENT 
 NOTICE     				  Noted Writers to Read Violent Passages from Acclaimed 
 Literature  WHAT:		Fighting Words:  A Reading   WHO:		First Amendment 
 Project presents Michael Chabon, Ayelet Waldman, Daniel Handler, Floyd 
 Salas, Jayne Lyn Stahl, Alan Kaufman, Jack Hirschman, Agneta Falk, 
 Micheline Marcom, and Gerald Nicosia, Andrew Sean Greer, Claire Ortalda, 
 Anthony Swofford, and Tamim Ansary  WHEN:		Wednesday, May 26th at 6:00 p.m. 
  WHERE:		Bruno’s, 2389 Mission Street (at 20th Street), San Francisco  
 HOW MUCH:	Suggested donation $5 - $10  WHY:		 Incidents of students being 
 criminally prosecuted or expelled or suspended from school for including 
 violent imagery in their creative writing have occurred regularly since the 
 institution of “zero tolerance” policies that were enacted following 
 the 1999 shootings at Columbine High School.  FIGHTING WORDS protests 
 against these incidents by celebrating the vital role violence has played 
 in our literary heritage.      		The next day -- May 27 -- the California 
 Supreme Court  will consider whether a high school student was properly 
 convicted of making criminal threats by distributing a poem to a few of his 
 classmates. Several of the confirmed readers listed above were among those 
 literary artists who filed a friend of the court brief urging the 
 California Supreme Court to consider the nature of poetry as an artistic 
 medium and the prominence of violent imagery in literature. See below to 
 learn more about the case known as In re: George T.      		More readers may 
 be confirmed as the event date approaches.    		The First Amendment Project 
 is a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting and promoting freedom 
 of information, expression, and petition.  FAP provides advice, educational 
 materials, and legal representation to its core constituency of activists, 
 journalists, and artists in service of these fundamental liberties.     
 About In re George T.  On May 27, 2004, the California Supreme Court will 
 hear oral argument in In re George T.  In that case, a San Diego area high 
 school student (named Julius) was convicted in juvenile court of making 
 criminal threats against two of his classmates because he gave them copies 
 of a poem he had written.    The poem explored a young person’s 
 alienation from his peers and concluded with the lines “For I am / Dark, 
 Destructive & Dangerous. I / Slap on my face of happiness but / Inside I am 
 evil!! For I can be / the next kid to bring guns to / kill students at 
 school. So Parents / watch your children cuz I’m BACK!!” The juvenile 
 court found that Julius had criminally threatened the two students by 
 giving them the poem.  The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction.  
 Several of the scheduled readers were among those literary artists who 
 filed a friend of the court brief urging the California Supreme Court to 
 consider the nature of poetry as an artistic medium and the prominence of 
 violent imagery in literature.  The friends of the court cautioned the 
 Court not to chill the creation and dissemination of literary works that 
 explore human emotions, no matter how dark, and not to discourage young 
 people from experimenting with poetic persona.  To read the brief, visit: 
 http://www.thefirstamendment.org/www/amicus%20briefs/complete%20brief.pdf.  
 Other Incidents Across the Country  Incidents of students being criminally 
 prosecuted or expelled or suspended from school for including violent 
 imagery in their creative writing have occurred regularly since the 
 institution of “zero tolerance” policies that were enacted following 
 the 1999 shootings at Columbine High School:  	•	In San Francisco, two 
 students were recently expelled from the Academy of Art University at least 
 in part for including violent imagery in class writing assignments.    
 •	Last fall, a 14 year old Alabama honor student was expelled from high 
 school for writing a story in her personal journal in which a daydreaming 
 student fantasizes about killing an unnamed teacher.    •	Also last fall, 
 an 11-year old middle school student was suspended from school for reading 
 to his class from a novel he had written based on the movie Halloween.    
 •	An honor student in Kansas was suspended for writing a poem titled 
 “Who Killed My Dog?”    •	A sixth grader in Denton, Texas was 
 convicted in juvenile court of making a criminal threat for writing a 
 class-project horror essay in which a student kills a teacher.  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/05/18/39143.php
SUMMARY:FIGHTING WORDS:  Noted Writers Read Violent Passages from Literature and Poetry
LOCATION:Bruno's  2389 Mission Street (at 20th Street)  (16th or 24th Street BART)
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/05/18/39143.php
DTSTART:20040527T010000Z
DTEND:20040527T030000Z
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