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Texas teacher sacked after reading Anne Frank's "Diary" to pupils

The teacher was dismissed after reading an extract adapted as a graphic novel.

UNITED STATES - At school, you may have read the Journal Anne Frank in class, the diary of a young Jewish girl exiled to the Netherlands during the Nazi regime. But in early September, a teacher in Texas was fired for reading extracts from the novel to his pupils in the fourth grade. According to the school district concerned, this version of Journal contains pornographic material.

The controversial extract is taken from a graphic novel adapted from the original work, which includes passages cut from other editions. And one of these passages concerns, among other things, a description of the clitoris written by Anne Frank. The teenager also mentions her attraction to another girl.

After parents complained about these passages being read " inappropriate "The teacher was dismissed, reports the television channel KFDM. This is not the first time that this adaptation has been contested: last year in Texas, the book was withdrawn from certain libraries.

However, the Anne Frank Fund, which manages the copyright for the various editions of the newspaper, had already defended the content of this graphic novel, explaining that a book written by a 12-year-old girl was perfectly appropriate for her peers.

A worrying wave of censorship

But the controversy doesn't stop there: the graphic novel has also been banned in several districts of Florida. This is just one of many examples in the United States, where school libraries have been facing a growing wave of censorship since 2021. A growing number of restrictive laws have been passed by Republican elected representatives, and unsurprisingly it is books about marginalised communities and dealing with subjects such as discrimination, gender and sexuality that are being banned.

Examples abound, particularly in conservative states: in one district in Florida, a book about two male penguins raising a baby penguin together was banned from nursery and primary schools. In South Carolina, it was Ta-Nehisi Coates' memoir on systemic racism, Black anger, which had been singled out by students who had managed to censor the book at their school.

The controversy is growing, to the point that on Tuesday 19 September, 175 artists and activists, including Ariana Grande, Roxane Gay and Mark Ruffalo, signed an open letter condemning this wave of censorship. " Soon these regressive ideologues will turn their attention to other forms of art and entertainment, persisting in their attacks that scapegoat marginalised communities, particularly racialised people and those from the LGBTQ+ community, "The text also calls for the defence of artistic freedom.

Text by huffingtonpost.fr /Émilie Rappeneau

Jean Dujardin to be Zorro for France Télévisions

The French actor will play the horseman who emerges from the night.

Jean Dujardin will don the mask of Zorro in a series for France Télévisions. Benjamin Charbit ("Les Sauvages") will be writing the script, reports "Satellifacts".

The hero - and his alter ego Don Diego Vega, a wealthy 24-year-old nobleman from the village of Reina in Los Angeles - was created by novelist Johnston McCulley in 1919. It has inspired numerous TV series, films and even cartoons. Douglas Fairbanks, Antonio Banderas and Alain Delon have all worn the cape, flat hat and wolf in films. Guy Williams (Zorro and Don Diego "de la" Vega, in the 1957 cult series).

Disney+ and Amazon in the race

Jean Dujardin has already had the opportunity to play him on television. It was in an episode of the series "Platane" in 2013.

 

"Zorro" has been all the rage for several months now. A new version described as respectful of the codes but contemporary is being prepared for Amazon Prime, with Spaniard Miguel Bernardeau ("Elite") as Don Diego de la Vega and Mexican actress Renata Notni as Lolita Marquez. Disney+ has the same ambition, preparing a remake with Wilmer Valderrama ("That '70s Show", "NCIS") in the lead role. Éric Judor is reportedly still working on a series for Canal+, a project he first mooted almost ten years ago.

Text by lematin.ch L.F.