Feb. 13th, 2011

vass: Google ad, advertising "invisible knapsack" (Knapsack)
[personal profile] vass
[crossposted to my journal]

I was going to buy and read How To Read A Book by Mortimer Adler, because Susan Wise Bauer recommended it in The Well-Educated Mind. So I checked his Wikipedia page to find out what else he'd written and so on, and came to this passage: "Asked in a 1990 interview why his Great Books of the Western World list did not include any black authors, he simply said, "They didn't write any good books."" My jaw dropped. That is more than aversive racism. That is more than active prejudice. That is actual white supremacy right there, blatant and visible.

To be honest, it's making me question my commitment to reading the 'canon' at all. I knew the whole idea was problematic, I had some idea of what I was in for. But I really thought I could just avoid the really dodgy books, and add in a bunch of books by authors of colour throughout history to compensate. I was so naive.

It's not enough. The 'Great Conversation' is one in which the voices that need most to be heard are intentionally shut out. This is not okay, and pretending will not make it go away.

I don't know what to do about this. You can modify aversive racism with exposure. You can try to dispel prejudice through education. But what do you do about someone who believes - no, not a person, a whole system founded on the belief that there is only one group of people capable of greatness? He didn't even say "They didn't write any great books," although that on its own would have been enough to set off this horrified questioning for me. He said "They didn't write any good books." You heard the man: Black people throughout all of history have written nothing of value at all.

My current planned 'history of the novel' reading list for this year includes 10 authors of colour, out of 26 books. I'm thinking I need to add three more classics by POC just to make it only half white. And for the rest of my reading (I have a minimum of 50 books per year) I'm going to make the same rule for authors of colour that I've made for female authors: not less than 50%. That rule is appropriate with female authors because women are slightly more than 50% of the population. For POCs, it's less appropriate, since more than half the world's population is of colour, but I am not yet ready to set a higher minimum than 50%.
vass: Jon Stewart reading a dictionary (books)
[personal profile] vass
So, pursuant to my previous post, I want to make my list of 'classic novels' I'm reading this year more diverse. I started with a list by Susan Wise Bauer that was very white and male, and added more women and authors of colour to the mix, but I've now decided that I didn't go far enough. This year's list ranges from 1895-2000, and I don't want to go any earlier than that because I'm reading in chronological order, and I did 1605-1895 last year. OTOH, I am strongly considering dipping back and reading The Tale of Genji because I strongly regret not reading it last year, as the first novel in history.

list )

As you see, I need at three more authors to make my list only half white. They should have some claim to be mainstream classics. They should all be novels, not short stories, essays, memoirs, poetry, or plays. This is because I'll be doing other types of literature in other years: this year is just about novels. I would prefer authors who aren't already listed.

I'm thinking James Baldwin for one, but I'm not sure which book of his. I've already read Another Country. I was thinking Giovanni's Room, but it only has white characters, and that seems like cheating.

Who am I missing?

Edited to add:
I've settled on three novels to add to my list:
James Baldwin, Go Tell It On The Mountain
Alice Walker, The Color Purple
Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things

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