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Re: How I made every exhibitor at ALA Midwinter uncomfortable
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From: Barbara Binns <bab9660_at_yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 04 Feb 2014 13:31:06 -0800 (PST)
I am new to this list (just joined today) and this one made me feel like jumping in. I was not at Midwinter, but I did go to ALA in Chicago 2013. I have asked about covers and gotten the standard - those don't sell. I spoke with one publisher on the subject of diversity and multiculturalism (I happen to like the terms) realized she was getting uncomfortable and looking over her shoulder at other people browsing her books, and I ended up going silent. Shame on me. About a year ago I emailed another publisher about their online catalog and asked how one would find which books featured diverse characters. The return comment - That's an interesting question. After that they went silent and I did not pursue. Shame on me again.
That won't happen this year.
I am part of a library trying to advocate for diverse books, a parent who had to search to find such books for her daughter, and as an author who writes multicultural books. I have been asked to speak on the subject at several writers and librarian conferences this year which will give me the opportunity to talk with publishers, editors and literary agents. You can bet I will be asking questions and, if applicable, pointing out deficiencies, no matter how uncomfortable it makes them.
B. A. Binns 2010 National Readers Choice Award Winner 2012 YALSA Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers 2012-13 Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award Nominee Stories of Real Boys Growing Into Real Menwebsite - http://www.babinns.com facebook.com/allthecolorsoflove
On Tuesday, February 4, 2014 1:03 PM, Hannah Gómez <hannahgomez_at_gmail.com> wrote:
Hello, all! I'm mostly a lurker here, but this month's topic is one I'm especially passionate about, for positive and negative reasons, so I thought I'd share my little social experiment that I tried at Midwinter.
I've been trying to be less greedy at conferences in general, since I have mountains of books from past conferences I still haven't read, but I'm sure I'm in the majority when I say it's just so hard to pass up so many delicious looking books, and it's not that I don't want to read them, only that reading more than 200 books a year is really impossible, and between two or more conferences a year, Netgalley, Edelweiss, libraries, and bookstores, I have access to plenty more than that and want to read them all. So I decided that this year, aside from a few books that I was dying to get my hands on, I would only ask publishers about their new stock in MG and YA that was either by/about people of color, the LGBTQ community, Jewish- or Islamic-inspired (mythology, religious practice, or philosophy) or disability. And I decided to say that straight out, as soon as they started talking to me, because a) the shocked GAH!? faces were pretty funny to behold, and
b) I was hoping that they would be embarrassed or uncomfortable enough to tell their bosses that they were embarrassed or uncomfortable and that maybe they should consider doing something to avoid such embarrassment in the future.
I also made it a point, even when browsing and not speaking directly to the reps, to say certain phrases extra loudly, like "oooh, brown girls on the cover!" and "hurrah for queer romance!" or "There is nothing I want less for my collection than more books about #whitegirlproblems."
Friends and readers of my blog already know that I have huge issues with the terms "diversity" and "multicultural" (http://mclicious.org/2012/12/09/lets-stop-calling-it-multicultural/)and that I am really tired of publishers patting themselves on the back for caring about that stuff, because caring gives them a reason not to actually try to change things. I wrote about that in my blog post responding to a disappointingly inactive CBC Diversity event I attended while in grad school in Boston: http://mclicious.org/2013/06/16/caring-is-not-trying-trying-is-not-succeeding/
So I hope my efforts might inspire other conference goers to follow suit. Quite frankly, I think that we have to try pressuring and embarrassing (okay, maybe it's shaming) in this way, because quite obviously, panel discussions and preaching to the choir really isn't having much of an effect.
If you're interested, here is the blog post I wrote about my experience (and my reading goals for 2014): http://mclicious.org/2014/02/01/three-simultaneous-reading-challenges-and-why-you-should-make-people-uncomfortable-at-conference-exhibits/
I'm curious if anyone else has done anything similar with regards to asking reps (or editors themselves, as they are often at big conferences) flat out what they have to offer that's not cis/het/WASP. What are the reactions you see?
Best,
Hannah Gómez, MA, MSLIS hannahgomez_at_gmail.com http://hannahgomez.wix.com/portfolio
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Date: Tue, 04 Feb 2014 13:31:06 -0800 (PST)
I am new to this list (just joined today) and this one made me feel like jumping in. I was not at Midwinter, but I did go to ALA in Chicago 2013. I have asked about covers and gotten the standard - those don't sell. I spoke with one publisher on the subject of diversity and multiculturalism (I happen to like the terms) realized she was getting uncomfortable and looking over her shoulder at other people browsing her books, and I ended up going silent. Shame on me. About a year ago I emailed another publisher about their online catalog and asked how one would find which books featured diverse characters. The return comment - That's an interesting question. After that they went silent and I did not pursue. Shame on me again.
That won't happen this year.
I am part of a library trying to advocate for diverse books, a parent who had to search to find such books for her daughter, and as an author who writes multicultural books. I have been asked to speak on the subject at several writers and librarian conferences this year which will give me the opportunity to talk with publishers, editors and literary agents. You can bet I will be asking questions and, if applicable, pointing out deficiencies, no matter how uncomfortable it makes them.
B. A. Binns 2010 National Readers Choice Award Winner 2012 YALSA Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers 2012-13 Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award Nominee Stories of Real Boys Growing Into Real Menwebsite - http://www.babinns.com facebook.com/allthecolorsoflove
On Tuesday, February 4, 2014 1:03 PM, Hannah Gómez <hannahgomez_at_gmail.com> wrote:
Hello, all! I'm mostly a lurker here, but this month's topic is one I'm especially passionate about, for positive and negative reasons, so I thought I'd share my little social experiment that I tried at Midwinter.
I've been trying to be less greedy at conferences in general, since I have mountains of books from past conferences I still haven't read, but I'm sure I'm in the majority when I say it's just so hard to pass up so many delicious looking books, and it's not that I don't want to read them, only that reading more than 200 books a year is really impossible, and between two or more conferences a year, Netgalley, Edelweiss, libraries, and bookstores, I have access to plenty more than that and want to read them all. So I decided that this year, aside from a few books that I was dying to get my hands on, I would only ask publishers about their new stock in MG and YA that was either by/about people of color, the LGBTQ community, Jewish- or Islamic-inspired (mythology, religious practice, or philosophy) or disability. And I decided to say that straight out, as soon as they started talking to me, because a) the shocked GAH!? faces were pretty funny to behold, and
b) I was hoping that they would be embarrassed or uncomfortable enough to tell their bosses that they were embarrassed or uncomfortable and that maybe they should consider doing something to avoid such embarrassment in the future.
I also made it a point, even when browsing and not speaking directly to the reps, to say certain phrases extra loudly, like "oooh, brown girls on the cover!" and "hurrah for queer romance!" or "There is nothing I want less for my collection than more books about #whitegirlproblems."
Friends and readers of my blog already know that I have huge issues with the terms "diversity" and "multicultural" (http://mclicious.org/2012/12/09/lets-stop-calling-it-multicultural/)and that I am really tired of publishers patting themselves on the back for caring about that stuff, because caring gives them a reason not to actually try to change things. I wrote about that in my blog post responding to a disappointingly inactive CBC Diversity event I attended while in grad school in Boston: http://mclicious.org/2013/06/16/caring-is-not-trying-trying-is-not-succeeding/
So I hope my efforts might inspire other conference goers to follow suit. Quite frankly, I think that we have to try pressuring and embarrassing (okay, maybe it's shaming) in this way, because quite obviously, panel discussions and preaching to the choir really isn't having much of an effect.
If you're interested, here is the blog post I wrote about my experience (and my reading goals for 2014): http://mclicious.org/2014/02/01/three-simultaneous-reading-challenges-and-why-you-should-make-people-uncomfortable-at-conference-exhibits/
I'm curious if anyone else has done anything similar with regards to asking reps (or editors themselves, as they are often at big conferences) flat out what they have to offer that's not cis/het/WASP. What are the reactions you see?
Best,
Hannah Gómez, MA, MSLIS hannahgomez_at_gmail.com http://hannahgomez.wix.com/portfolio
(520) 481-8778 You are currently subscribed to ccbc-net as: bab9660_at_yahoo.com. To post to the list, send message to... ccbc-net_at_lists.wisc.edu To receive messages in digest format, send a message to... ccbc-net-request_at_lists.wisc.edu
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--- You are currently subscribed to ccbc-net as: ccbc-archive_at_post.education.wisc.edu. To post to the list, send message to: ccbc-net_at_lists.wisc.edu To receive messages in digest format, send a message to... ccbc-net-request_at_lists.wisc.edu ...and include only this command in the body of the message: set ccbc-net digest CCBC-Net Archives The CCBC-Net archives are available to all CCBC-Net listserv members. The archives are organized by month and year. A list of discussion topics (including month/year) is available at http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/ccbcnet/archives.asp To access the archives, go to: http://ccbc.education.wisc.edu/ccbc-net and enter the following: username: ccbc-net password: Look4PostsReceived on Tue 04 Feb 2014 03:34:55 PM CST