
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Oakland children's author Maggie Tokuda-Hall refused an offer from Scholastic to license her book "Love in the Library" when the publishing giant asked her to remove the word "racism" and historical context about incarceration camps for Japanese Americans during World War II. She tells host Cecilia Lei that efforts to whitewash history violate adults' "moral obligation" to tell kids the truth. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod
Got a tip, comment, question? Email us: [email protected]
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.4
313313 ratings
Oakland children's author Maggie Tokuda-Hall refused an offer from Scholastic to license her book "Love in the Library" when the publishing giant asked her to remove the word "racism" and historical context about incarceration camps for Japanese Americans during World War II. She tells host Cecilia Lei that efforts to whitewash history violate adults' "moral obligation" to tell kids the truth. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod
Got a tip, comment, question? Email us: [email protected]
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
399 Listeners
38,580 Listeners
90,729 Listeners
8,632 Listeners
9,248 Listeners
110,617 Listeners
55,911 Listeners
2,269 Listeners
285 Listeners
9,506 Listeners
281 Listeners
5,424 Listeners
6,219 Listeners
225 Listeners
5,463 Listeners
83 Listeners
15,405 Listeners
39 Listeners
3,333 Listeners