>>>I take the first amendment quite seriously and and it concerns me that any books are banned but especially these.<<<
The books you mention are no longer banned by the Catholic Church. The Church has not published a list of banned books since 1966.
So, you can rest easy that the Big Bad Evil Catholic Church is not out to try to squelch the First Amendment.
What's more, when the Church banned a book, it only prohibited CATHOLICS from reading it. The ban did not apply to non-Catholics. And since the USA had very few Catholics in the 19th century -- when "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and "Tom Sawyer" were published -- the ban did not affect very many Americans.
The Church has the right to issue proclamations -- including bans on certain books -- whenever it deems something to be a threat to the faith of individual Catholics.
As for the books you mention, I imagine that they contained certain things that were objectionable in some way -- sexual or religious, for instance. Despite whatever good points they may have had.
With regard to "Uncle Tom's Cabin," in particular: its author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, was the daughter of Lyman Beecher -- who was a raging anti-Catholic bigot.
So, while I have never read "Uncle Tom's Cabin," I imagine that there was perhaps some anti-Catholic elements to it. Not unreasonable to assume that Beecher's anti-Catholicism influenced his daughter, which in turn influenced her literary work.
.
The books you mention are no longer banned by the Catholic Church. The Church has not published a list of banned books since 1966.
So, you can rest easy that the Big Bad Evil Catholic Church is not out to try to squelch the First Amendment.
What's more, when the Church banned a book, it only prohibited CATHOLICS from reading it. The ban did not apply to non-Catholics. And since the USA had very few Catholics in the 19th century -- when "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and "Tom Sawyer" were published -- the ban did not affect very many Americans.
The Church has the right to issue proclamations -- including bans on certain books -- whenever it deems something to be a threat to the faith of individual Catholics.
As for the books you mention, I imagine that they contained certain things that were objectionable in some way -- sexual or religious, for instance. Despite whatever good points they may have had.
With regard to "Uncle Tom's Cabin," in particular: its author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, was the daughter of Lyman Beecher -- who was a raging anti-Catholic bigot.
So, while I have never read "Uncle Tom's Cabin," I imagine that there was perhaps some anti-Catholic elements to it. Not unreasonable to assume that Beecher's anti-Catholicism influenced his daughter, which in turn influenced her literary work.
.