Tennessee school district bans Alex Haley's Roots under 2022 state law
Source: The Guardian
Fri 15 May 2026 17.01 EDT
Last modified on Fri 15 May 2026 17.51 EDT
A Tennessee school district has banned Roots, the author Alex Haleys groundbreaking novel and one of the most renowned and influential works about the horrors of the transatlantic slave trade. Knox county schools (KCS) took that step under a state law that has disappeared hundreds of titles from school libraries and alarmed advocates of free expression.
First published in 1976, Roots: The Saga of an American Family tells the story of Kunta Kinte, who was brutally stolen from his home in the Gambia and taken to North America to be sold into the nightmare of slavery. The novel chronicles six generations of Kintes descendants in the US to Haley himself; won the Pulitzer prize; and was later adapted into a mini-series.
The book and show each were cultural phenomena, transforming public understanding of slavery and African American identity and inspiring thousands to trace their own lineage. But KCS earlier in May pulled the novel from school shelves under Tennessees so-called Age-Appropriate Materials Act.
First passed in 2022, the law saw book-banning across the state soar to become third-highest in the country. It required Tennessee schools to have a public list of the materials in their libraries and to have a policy for reviewing them for appropriateness after feedback from parents, guardians, students or school employees. The law also broadly prohibited titles if they were found to contain nudity, sexual abuse, sexual content or excessive violence. A KCS spokesperson, Carly Harrington, confirmed the districts decision to remove Roots from school library shelves under that law.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/15/tennessee-book-ban-alex-haley-roots
UpInArms
(55,332 posts)and creating the uneducated mindless masses.
Walleye
(45,385 posts)BumRushDaShow
(172,141 posts)and his childhood home in Henning is now a museum.
Alex Haley Museum

The miniseries sequel to "Roots" - "Roots: The Next Generations" took place in Tennessee.
OldBaldy1701E
(11,521 posts)But, leave it to one of the states that is last in school funding to start being even more racist than they normally are.
How enlightened!
BumRushDaShow
(172,141 posts)for a training conference and flew in on a Sunday. Literally almost everything was closed (I managed to find one little pharmacy/convenience store open near the hotel). When I turned on the radio to try to get some news, there was nothing but station after station with religious programming. One of the stations even had a promo that included a byline about being in "The buckle of the Bible belt" and I was like OMG where the hell am I?
OldBaldy1701E
(11,521 posts)(Basically.)
So, I grew up in a very small town, and when I moved away to the 'big city' (LOL), everyone was interested in why I kept mentioning how I preferred it over where I was raised. (BTW, I am referring to the area around the Dismal, the Outer Banks was always my preferred place, but being there was expensive and a tough place to earn income once the tourist went away for the season.) Finally, one of my friends asked me point blank why I preferred the city over my home town. I finally had an inspiration as to how to answer it, thanks to the fact that I was back home for the holidays at the moment.
I replied, "Because I can go out and buy Christmas presents at three in the morning, that's why!"
(That freaking home town of mine rolled up the sidewalks at 8 pm. So, because of the schedule of most of the people (farm related), the town held its forty hour week differently, so that the farmers and their help could handle certain business that they could not from Monday to Friday. So, everything in my town would shut down on Wednesdays at noon, so that they could all be open on Saturday from 6-7am till 12-1pm. Which means that, on Wednesday, you either remembered to get to the local store by noon, or you had to drive 32 miles to find another store. Fun times. Also, only the grocery store would open on Sunday, but only from noon till six pm.)
BumRushDaShow
(172,141 posts)But the one disappointment was one of the days that week after my last training session of the day, since my hotel was near Beale Street, I walked the couple blocks to get to it and when I arrived, it was completely deserted (this was around dinner time 5pm - 6pm). I chalked it up to maybe not getting busy until nighttime!
paleotn
(22,684 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(11,521 posts)Wonder Why
(7,232 posts)Jimvanhise
(602 posts)Anything anyone bans can be found on the internet. That's why nations like China have restrictions on the internet because they are threatened by freedom. So all of their censorship efforts are pointless.
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(137,318 posts)Tactical Peek
(1,430 posts)You can't handle the truth!
