Even the word 'period' is now politicised. That makes Judy Blume's classic ode to puberty especially relevant
- Written by Jess Carniel, Senior Lecturer in Humanities, University of Southern Queensland
A few years ago, my friends and I reminisced about our favourite novels as children. One of them was Judy Blume’s 1970 classic, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret[1], released this week (in the US, though not yet in Australia) as a film.
Blume’s novel centres on a year in the life of 11-year-old Margaret Simon, after she moves from New York City to the suburbs of New Jersey. Margaret was raised without religion: her mother was disowned by her Christian parents when she married Margaret’s Jewish father.
But Margaret secretly talks to God as she grapples with the challenges of puberty, friendship and finding her religious identity. Margaret and her friends, who dub themselves the Pre-Teen Sensations, are obsessed with growing breasts and getting their periods.
Despite Blume’s novels’ enduring legacies, there have been few screen adaptations of her work – and Blume has frequently been disappointed[2] by them.
But she was convinced by the passion[3] of director Kelly Fremon Craig (The Edge of Seventeen[4]) and producer James L. Brooks (Broadcast News[5], The Simpsons).
Read more: Sex and other reasons why we ban books for young people[6]
Speaking out against censorship
Blume has spoken out against current movements to ban and censor books[7], observing the climate is worse now than in the 1980s, “because it’s become political.”
Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret and Forever[8] (1975) – also slated for a screen adaptation, by Netflix[9] – are Blume’s most controversial books, for their frank depictions of puberty and teen sexuality.
Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret was listed in the American Library Association’s 100 most challenged books[10] – books people were seeking to ban – from the 1990s (when the association first started tracking) until the 2010s. It was even banned in Blume’s children’s school library[11].
Forever, a no-holds-barred, sweet and funny account of first love and first sex, published in 1975, ranks number seven on the most challenged books list. Most recently, it was banned by a school district in Florida[12].