[identity profile] triestine.livejournal.com
Greetings,

I have already gone on about this in my LJ and other networks so apologies to those I know from other places who will be seeing similar posts twice.

Today is the International Day of the Roma.

Now, my SEE country hasn't got a fantastic record in its treatment of our Roma compatriots, so when I try to keep up I do so through immediate means: newspapers, journals, debates, or other involvement. To my shame I have not, before I came across this community, thought of looking for fiction as another way of learning about the culture(s). Amazon is offering me "The Roads of the Roma: A PEN Anthology of Gypsy Writers" (no reviews) and Ian Hancock's - himself Romani - "We are the Romani People", and I am getting those, but I much prefer hearing recommendations from people in focused forums than from bookstores. Has anyone read something by a Romani author?

Thank you!
helens78: Cartoon. An orange cat sits on the chest of a woman with short hair and glasses. (Default)
[personal profile] helens78
Have you been looking around for lists of African-American-centric children's books? Oh my, have I got the lists for you.

Black Books Galore! Guide to Great African American Children's Books by Donna Rand, Toni Trent Parker, and Sheila Foster

(It also has a sequel: More Great African American Children's Books, plus one for girls and one for boys. I have all of those out from the library right now, but haven't read any of them yet!)

These lists were compiled by authors who had struggled to find children's books that showed positive portrayals of African-Americans -- especially African-American kids! -- and African-Americans doing different things in history:

[At an African American children's book festival, one] of the boys took a book, Reflections of a Black Cowboy, from one of our display tables and began to read it. After a while he looked up at Sheila, our founding partner, with an expression of surprise and disbelief. "There is no such thing as a black cowboy!" he said. "Oh, yes there is!" Sheila responded and handed him two other books about black cowboys, pioneers, and mountain men.
Even reading the book of recommendations will teach you things you never knew about African-American history, not to mention giving you lists of "must read" books (I wrote down 117 books by 93 different authors; I look forward to going to my library and just sitting down with a list sometime in the near future, seeing what I can find).

The book is incredibly well-organized, and there are indexes of titles, authors, illustrators, and topics. There are sidebars with many of the authors and illustrators, and an appendix listing the Coretta Scott King winners and honorees as well as listing Newbery and Caldecott award books with African-American/African themes and Reading Rainbow selections with African-American/African themes.

It was a little exhausting inhaling this particular book; reading 500 book reviews over two sittings has made my brain feel very, very full. XD (The other books contain 450, 360, and "over 350" recommendations, respectively; I don't yet know how much overlap they contain, although I gather there's none between the first and second.)
[identity profile] waelisc.livejournal.com
E-books by PoC came up in the recs post from earlier this week and that made me want to do some surfing for online collections by writers of color. Here's what I found this evening.

Some of these contain book-length texts, others are shorter works like poetry, stories and interviews. (Was there going to be a sister comm for short works?)

South Asian Diaspora Literature and Arts Archive

African American Women Writers of the 19th Century

Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers Project, 1936-1938

Zora Neale Hurston Plays at the Library of Congress

Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache Texts. (These stories were collected by white anthropologists but as best I can tell, they were taking dictation from the Native American persons being interviewed - I hope that's okay.)
[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
Mods, please let me know if you'd like me to move this post off-comm.

So I was looking back at my movie log the other day, and I thought to myself, wow, this is a list of stuff by and about white people if I've ever seen one. I tend to watch geek movies (of the comic book/sff novel adaptation persuasion), musicals, artsy independent films, and animation, and the vast majority of the films in these genres that turn up in theatres around here, that I put in my Netflix queue, that I check out of the library-- very, very white. White directors, white writers, mostly white actors. (Except the animation, because I watch a ridiculous quantity of anime.)

This is not how I would like my viewing habits to work in a world in which I know damn well there is a long history of cinema coming out of India, Brazil, Senegal, and Korea, to name only areas about whose film industries I have already heard some things.

I like the model of this comm as a way of changing habits: numbering the books one reads so as to have an accurate measurement of what is going on as far as proportion of works read by POC, and having a time frame so as to help with not putting things off (with the understanding that different people have different amounts of time, read at different rates, etc.). I think that this model would also transfer well to movies.

Now, as far as I personally am concerned, I am not talking about a fifty-film project, because that would take-- well, a friend and I gave one another lists in 2005 of the top twenty movies we'd each like the other to see, and I still have four to go on that list. I watch a lot of TV-format anime. I rewatch comfort films from when I was younger. New movies take a lot of mental energy for me, a lot of emotional investment.

However, I think I could manage twelve films in a year. One a month. Films by and concerning POC. I will not be counting anime in this because the point is to change my viewing habits, not to finish in two months, the same reason I'm not counting manga for this comm.

Now, given that a great many people are involved in the making of a film, it can be harder to tell what one means by saying a film is 'by' anybody, especially since I personally am rather ambivalent about the auteur theory. However, I think the simplest way to do it is going to be to look at the director and/or the writer: I will watch films for this that are directed and/or written by POC. There are also films that are neither that I suspect might be reasonable to watch for this, such as Fassbinder's Ali: Fear Eats the Soul, but in general those are the criteria I'm going to use.

And I'll blog them. Here, if people think that's an idea; my own journal, in addition to or instead of here. If other people also wanted to do this and blog about it, maybe a sister comm to this one. ETA: If you would be interested in participating in a sister comm to this one, please let me know in the comments.

And-- please, please, I want recommendations! I have a preliminary list, but the films I've heard about that fit this challenge tend to be 'issue' or 'message' movies, with a side order of depressing, and I know I won't be able to manage twelve of those, though I'm sure I'll watch some. I want to watch films from everywhere. I want to watch comedies, romances, children's movies, slices of life, animation, documentaries, musicals, dramas. I would also love recs for books about international film and film by POC.
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
[livejournal.com profile] carenejeans and I have been thinking of doing rec-posts monthly -- it hasn't been a month yet since the last one, but we have so many new people about, I think we could stand to have a new one.

First, though, we've been adding links to the del.icio.us account:If you have links you'd like to add, please drop a comment here, or add "50books_poc" to your del.icio.us network and tag the link "for:50books_poc."

Now, on to the fun stuff! If you're looking books in a particular genre or on a particular topic -- or simply want to ask, "Hey, I liked THIS book, what else would you recommend?" -- leave a comment. With luck, someone might have just the rec for you.
sage: Still of Natasha Romanova from Iron Man 2 (joy: books)
[personal profile] sage
"Real" Indians and Others : Mixed-blood Urban Native Peoples and Indigenous Nationhood by Bonita Lawrence

This book is a study of 29 individuals in the Toronto Native community identifying as mixed race. )


eta: Just for the record, the author is part Mi'kmaq and undertook the study as part of her own attempts to understand and validate the range of urban mixed-race Aboriginal experience.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
For anyone into speculative fiction, Nisi Shawl has a new list from the Carl Brandon Society: nine great books by authors of African descent, each with a comment by the CBS member who nominated it:

nisi_la: CBS list of recommended reads

Their resources section has even more booklists, so check it out.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
For anyone looking for inspiration, [livejournal.com profile] delux_vivens reminded me about a meme that went round last year.

In response to the Big Read meme, a list of great books by people of colour was compiled, featuring 262 books in its expanded version:

denim_queen: 180 expanded

And as people mention in the comments, that's just a fraction of what's out there.
rydra_wong: Chiana from Farscape in a silly hat, captioned "really white girls against racism" (Chi - *really* white girls)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
I thought it might be helpful to have a post where people can ask for recs, and the mod has kindly given the go-ahead.

So if you're looking for books in a particular genre or on a particular topic, or if you want to say, "I loved such-and-such a book; which other authors might I like?" -- here's your post.

Leave a comment, and hopefully people will chip in with some suggestions.
[identity profile] meganbmoore.livejournal.com

Hi, this year will be my first time to participate.  If anyone would like to make recommendations, I've made a recs request post with a bit about my tastes here at my LJ.
rydra_wong: Chiana from Farscape in a silly hat, captioned "really white girls against racism" (Chi - *really* white girls)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
I volunteered to put together a post with some recs and resources for SF/F by authors of colour, so here (finally) goes. Please add your own recs in the comments! Please!

First off, some resources:

[livejournal.com profile] matociquala started collecting a list of science fiction/fantasy writers of colour from comments here, and [livejournal.com profile] _minxy_ collated it and put it into user-friendly form here (with some added links to various authors' blogs and LJs).

The Carl Brandon Society (the blog in particular) and Afro-Futurism are full of resources, which I've only just started dipping into.

And the Feminist SF Wiki has a handy list of women of colour writing SF here.

The fabulous [livejournal.com profile] deadbrowalking tends to focus on discussion of films and TV, but also includes posts about books and comics. If you want to join the comm (rather than just watch it), check out this post first and don't make the mods smite you.


Read more... )

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