My New Year's Reading Resolutions by Courtney McKinney-Whitaker
I always thought I was pretty supportive of diversity.
Do We Need Diverse Books? Of course! Am I all for that? Absolutely! Do I have more
than one graduate degree to do with books and children and the relationships
between them and how young people need to see themselves reflected in
literature? They are on my office wall in pretty frames.
Do I buy diverse books? Are they on my own personal
library shelves? Well...not so much. For me, this has been an error of omission
rather than something I meant to happen. Like a lot of people (everyone?—yet another
reason We Need Diverse Books) I lean toward books about people like me. In my
personal backpack of privilege (the link is for a satirical article--click through for the original by Peggy McIntosh), I carry the fact that there are a lot of books
about people like me: straight, white, cisgender, overachieving princess-types.
(I never thought I had a particularly privileged childhood, but I've recently
been assured that if you had three
American Girl dolls with accessories, you had a particularly privileged
childhood.) So what I'm saying is, I naturally gravitate toward books about
characters I relate to. Characters I can imagine being.
I'm all for increased diversity in publishing, but actions
speak louder than words, right? Even for writers.
Two things happened last fall that made me really
take a look at my own shelves. First, #WNDB started trending on Twitter.
Second, if there's one thing I love as much as a book about an overachieving
princess-type, it's a holiday anthology. I read MY TRUE LOVE GAVE TO ME, the
anthology of YA holiday short stories edited by Stephanie Perkins. Reading
about so many characters who are not like me (in gender, in sexuality, in
faith, in race—in a bunch of ways), made me realize how startlingly NOT diverse
my own bookshelves are. I don't even have many books by male writers. I'd been
thinking about how to make my writing
more diverse, but I realized I'd skipped a major step. First, I need to make my
reading more diverse. If I ever want
to pay more than lip service to the idea of diversity, I need to check my own
privilege, and my own habits.
In true overachieving princess fashion, I like
measurable goals with tangible results, so I've set myself two tasks, both of
which I'm really looking forward to. First, each month in 2015, I am going to
buy and read one YA or MG book whose protagonist is not exactly like me. I may
read more, but I'm definitely going to buy at least one because publishing
follows our pocketbooks, and if diverse books lose money, publishers will be
more reluctant to publish them. I'm also going to keep track of the books I
finish in 2015 so I can get a good overall picture of my reading habits.
Second, I signed up for a class taught by author B. A.
Binns through the Young Adult chapter of Romance Writers of America. I write
about characters who are like me because I'm scared of writing about those who
aren't. I'm afraid I'll get it wrong. I'm a perfectionist—I hate getting things
wrong. I'm also afraid that in getting it wrong, I might do more harm than
good. I'm also a lifelong student, and I'm committed to learning what I don't
know.
What has inspired you to check your privilege
lately? What steps are you taking toward greater diversity in your reading,
writing, and life?
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