Lenox Library to Screen 'Banned Together' Documentary

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LENOX, Mass. — In response to the growing trend of book bans sweeping across the nation, Lenox Library will host a private, pre-release screening of the documentary film Banned Together, the first completed feature film to cover book banning, censorship, and students' fight for intellectual freedom, particularly in relation to the rights of marginalized students in the United States.

The screening is free and open to the public, and will take place on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024 at 2:00 p.m. in the Lenox Town Hall Auditorium, located at 6 Walker Street, Lenox.  A Q&A with director Kate Way will follow the screening.

According to a press release:

Featuring a dynamic cast of young activists, intense public protests, personal threats, criminal accusations, and highly charged school board meetings, Banned Together sheds light on the escalating issue of book bans and the censorship of curricula in public schools.

The documentary follows the courageous efforts of three students from Beaufort, South Carolina, who take a stand when 97 books are abruptly removed from their school libraries. As these students rise to become national voices in the fight against censorship, the film captures the broader narrative of book banning and curriculum censorship across the United States. Banned Together offers viewers a comprehensive look at both sides of the debate and provides an inside perspective on the heated battles occurring in schools and legislatures. This community's story is interwoven with the larger national landscape of book banning, including interviews with best-selling authors, policymakers, and experts.

The film features interviews with best-selling authors whose works have been banned, including Jodi Picoult, Juno Dawson, Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, Ellen Hopkins, and Erica L. Sánchez. It also includes insights from Maryland Congressman Jamie Raskin, constitutional scholars, educators, librarians, parents, and student activists from across the country. The film also features discussions with representatives from the ACLU, PEN America, the American Library Association, and Moms for Liberty.

Producers Jennifer Wiggin and Allyson Rice of Atomic Focus, along with directors Kate Way and Tom Wiggin, were inspired by the activism of these young students and the vast scope of this rapidly evolving national issue. The post-production was led by award-winning editor Cha Quallis.

Visit https://lenoxlib.org or the Library's Facebook page for more information


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Lenox Library and Indie Lens Pop-Up Present The Librarians

LENOX, Mass.—On Saturday, February 7, 2026 at 2:00 p.m., Lenox Library and Indie Lens Pop-Up, presented by ITVS, INDEPENDENT LENS, will host a special free screening of The Librarians, the critically-acclaimed documentary that follows a network of besieged librarians as they unite to examine how book restriction policies are shaping library collections.

According to a press release:

From Oscar-nominated Director and Producer Kim A. Snyder (Death By Numbers, Newtown, Us Kids) and Executive Producer Sarah Jessica Parker, The Librarians takes viewers from Texas to Florida and beyond, where local libraries have become unexpected battlegrounds in a national struggle over parental control, intellectual freedom, and democracy itself. Sparked by the controversial "Krause List" in Texas, which targets 850 books centered on race and LGBTQIA+ stories, the film takes a deep investigative dive into the escalating movement against book banning. The film captures the courage and resilience of the everyday heroes, librarians, as well as concerned parents and students flanking them, who have become first responders in the fight for the freedom to read, standing defiantly against censorship at all costs.

After the screening, there will be an interactive panel discussion about censorship, its effects on democracy, and the broader implications for education and intellectual freedom:

Martin Garnar (he/him) is the director of the Amherst College Library and editor of the Intellectual Freedom Manual (10th ed.), the authoritative reference for librarians for day-to-day guidance on maintaining free and equal access to information for all people.

Jennifer Guerin (she/her) earned her M.A. in English from Georgetown University and her Master of Library and Information Science from the University of North Texas. She also received her Law for Librarians training from the American Library Association in May 2024. Jennifer currently serves as Librarian at W.E.B. Du Bois Regional Middle School in Great Barrington, MA, where a complaint against Maia Kobabe's Gender Queer in a teacher's classroom made national headlines in 2024.

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