conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
and getting smacked in the face with a gratuitous racial/ethnic slur.

Kid's book, public domain, naturally.

This right here is the reason that I almost never recommend books older than myself to people for their kids, and seriously de-emphasized "classic children's literature" with the nieces when they were young. Contemporary kidlit might still be problematic, sometimes very much so, but the author and publisher have usually considered that some of their readers might be put off by being blatantly told that people in whatever group all have whatever bad trait, or seeing certain words bandied about.

Of course, very nearly everybody else who recommends books for kids - including too many teachers and librarians - has a bad tendency to reach into their own childhood memories, and they get really defensive if you say that their cherished favorites just aren't all that. Published booklists are slowly getting better on this front, but personal recommendations really aren't. You'd think children's librarians, at least, would be better about this, but too often I've seen that they really aren't.

Date: 2019-02-07 07:48 am (UTC)
shy_magpie: A Magpie (Default)
From: [personal profile] shy_magpie
I know the feeling. Also nothing quite like reading something you remember as being a wholesome part of your childhood and realizing how bigoted it was. People complain about the live action disney movies but I wouldn't show most of the animated ones to kids now days. I haven't had cause to look at the princess ones but all the animal stories other than possibly Lion King have at least one scene that makes you wonder why they included it except to remind people they are racist. The Siamese cats in Lady and the Tramp, a song in the Aristocats that suddenly burst into "ching-chong" stereotypes, the crows and the roustabouts in Dumbo...

Date: 2019-02-07 03:04 pm (UTC)
delight: (Default)
From: [personal profile] delight
I think The Rescuers is lacking in overtly racist scenes! Sure, there's lots of racial stereotypes in Mouse UN, but there aren't any HELLO THIS IS A SCENE THAT EXISTS PURELY DUE TO RACISM parts.

Date: 2019-02-07 03:59 pm (UTC)
shy_magpie: A Magpie (Default)
From: [personal profile] shy_magpie

Suddenly hit by how much I loved the Rescue Rangers cartoon, I almost forgot. It was followed by Dark Wing Duck and I'm surprised I never went furry. Oh gads I got into Batman because my brother said it was a human version

Date: 2019-02-07 04:08 pm (UTC)
delight: (the urban fox)
From: [personal profile] delight
I really liked Darkwing Duck too! My cousin was the Batman kid in the family. XD I am also pretty sure the furry Robin Hood is why I used to say I wanted to be a fox when I grew up so you are not alone.

Date: 2019-02-09 01:18 am (UTC)
nodrog: Protest at ADD designation distracted in midsentence (ADD)
From: [personal profile] nodrog


“Let’s get dangerous.”  I like that.

Date: 2019-02-08 03:36 am (UTC)
greghousesgf: (Hugh SF Music)
From: [personal profile] greghousesgf
even the ones that don't have any racist crap still have sexist crap in
them...

Date: 2019-02-07 02:25 pm (UTC)
calimac: (Default)
From: [personal profile] calimac
Care to name the book, so that we can, variously,

1) avoid the book?

2) judge the slur for ourselves?

Date: 2019-02-07 03:28 pm (UTC)
silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
From: [personal profile] silveradept
So many people edited out those bits from their own experience and didn't go back to check before recommending them to others. Including the librarians.

Date: 2019-02-07 07:42 pm (UTC)
silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
From: [personal profile] silveradept
Oh, when they defend it as "product of its time," feel free to take the gloves off and go to town, especially for a children's librarian, because the Children's Literature Legacy Award is a real thing and got renamed because a beloved book was full of racism.

Date: 2019-02-07 04:24 pm (UTC)
wpadmirer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] wpadmirer
UGH.

Date: 2019-02-07 06:31 pm (UTC)
author_by_night: (Default)
From: [personal profile] author_by_night
I think they should be old enough to understand that you shouldn't use words like that. I remember reading books with offensive words in high school, but it was made very clear that you don't use those words anymore, and they were also books like To Kill a Mockingbird, invoking those words to show why they're wrong. (However... that's a whole other post.)

Date: 2019-02-07 07:04 pm (UTC)
author_by_night: (Default)
From: [personal profile] author_by_night
Oh, no, sorry. I was speaking generally about when kids should read those things.

m talking about when they were young - and "understanding that they don't use words like that" isn't the issue

Exactly! That was my point, that it should be when they're old enough to realize those things were a product of their time.

Sorry, I was agreeing with you but in a roundabout way. :)
Edited Date: 2019-02-07 07:04 pm (UTC)

Date: 2019-02-08 04:52 pm (UTC)
author_by_night: (Default)
From: [personal profile] author_by_night
So re-reading this, I think I partly missed the point. I wasn't actually agreeing with you - not on purpose, but my mind jumped to literature for older kids who can assess when something wouldn't be acceptable now. You were talking strictly books like Little House on the Prairie.

I was really trying to say "you're right - older books are one thing, for kids who can understand you shouldn't say that, but it's problematic with five year old readers who may not be able to deduce that." ETA: Kids in general, that is.
Edited Date: 2019-02-08 04:54 pm (UTC)

Date: 2019-02-07 06:47 pm (UTC)
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
From: [personal profile] maju
There is a series of Australian kids' books (the "Billabong" series) set around the turn of the 20th century which I read and enjoyed as a kid. Fairly recently I reread one or two of them and realised how extremely racist and sexist they are.

Date: 2019-02-07 07:08 pm (UTC)
author_by_night: (Default)
From: [personal profile] author_by_night
I re-read a Pippi Longstocking book years ago and was horrified by its portrayal of Pacific Islanders. I don't remember the specifics, just that this was in high school and quite startled that the books I loved as a kid had that racism.

Date: 2019-02-07 07:19 pm (UTC)
thewayne: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thewayne
Wow! I can't say that I have any favorite children's books, I don't remember any. But I'm completing a degree in library science (with no expectations of working in the field) and this is a good thing to keep in mind.

Date: 2019-02-07 09:03 pm (UTC)
thewayne: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thewayne

I have vague memories of a few: Curious George, something about a white dog with a black spot that got dirty, Steamshovel Mike or something,  But that was an awful long time ago.  My childhood kinda sucked because of my medical problems, and in the third grade I started adult fiction, so I don't have much of a memory for children's books.

Date: 2019-02-07 09:40 pm (UTC)
tielan: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tielan
Mike Mulligan And His Steam Shovel?

Date: 2019-02-07 10:00 pm (UTC)
thewayne: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thewayne

That's the one!  And I definitely liked that one.

Date: 2019-02-07 07:44 pm (UTC)
silveradept: The emblem of the Heartless, a heart with an X of thorns and a fleur-de-lis at the bottom instead of the normal point. (Heartless)
From: [personal profile] silveradept
Librarianship as a field is full of the subtle kind of - isms, Much as I would love to believe we're making steps forward.

Date: 2019-02-07 09:04 pm (UTC)
thewayne: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thewayne

Indeed.

Date: 2019-02-07 11:10 pm (UTC)
dogstar: Fireflight! (Default)
From: [personal profile] dogstar
Oh god, yes.

I was reading "Little House In The Big Woods" outloud to my friend's daughter and had to quickly scramble to rephrase a section....

Date: 2019-02-08 07:37 pm (UTC)
kareina: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kareina
I still love and re-read regularly the Anne of Green Gables books, but I understand that they are a pretty extreme example of a culture with some very serious -isms for gender, religion, and race, though at least they also show that it is possible for exceptional individuals to overcome some of the "handicaps" they face due to one or more of the above conditions.

Date: 2019-02-08 11:02 pm (UTC)
kareina: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kareina
The quality of writing does matter, as does the bit about some of the characters noticing, some of the time, the problems with their own world.

Date: 2019-02-09 01:13 am (UTC)
nodrog: (Great World War)
From: [personal profile] nodrog

As a side issue, or maybe not, I could mention Andre Norton’s 1950s SF works, which were written for a target audience and played to it, viz. Starguard and The Sioux Spaceman, both of which had zero (0) female characters anywhere in them.  Not even mentioned in the background.  But they’re both ripping yarns, the latter drawing on her own anthropology background, and it wasn’t until later that I said, “Now, wait a minute…”

Date: 2019-02-09 07:44 am (UTC)
nodrog: بِسْمِ اللهِ الرَّحْمٰنِ الرَّحِيْمِ (Basmala)
From: [personal profile] nodrog

Well, it would do - I was of that target audience myself when I read them!

Her education in history and anthropology not only allowed her to write convincingly of Neolithic and Bronze-Age societies, but she was “woke” from the prejudices of the day.  Many of her stories were set in the era following the “Burn-off,” a nuclear war that decimated the northern hemisphere… so it was the shall-we-say darker races which represented humanity among the stars, and white Europeans & Anglo-Saxons were so rare as to invite comment.

That was downright subversive in the 1950s!  Yet she drew no particular attention to it, and kids reading the stories took it in as a matter of course.


Date: 2019-02-08 12:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com
What book, then, and what did it say?

Date: 2019-02-08 09:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com
Ah, boarding-school stories from back in the day. My childhood favorites were Rilla of the Lighthouse (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18071267-rilla-of-the-lighthouse) and The Jolliest School of All (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8356546-the-jolliest-school-of-all). I haven't read either of them since grade school, and don't remember any racism per se, but I have no doubt it's there.

When I got to boarding school myself, I found out what sanitized, romanticized, wishful-thinking piffle such stories really are. Ohhh well!

Date: 2019-02-09 01:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com
Public school had been a living hell, so boarding school was significantly better, and it was fun in a lot of ways, but not necessarily in nice socially-acceptable ladylike ways. I didn't drink, smoke pot or do drugs, but a lot of my schoolmates did. We had sex, got in fights, cut class, sneaked out at night - it was quite a squalid lifestyle; not at all what those books had led me to expect.

Date: 2019-02-11 01:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com
The girls in boarding-school books do not get into fist-fights - certainly not in pre-WWII books! There is plenty of social bitchery, but nobody ever gets punched in the tit.
Edited Date: 2019-02-11 01:17 pm (UTC)

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