Transcript Slide 1

Multiculturalism
Multicultural children’s books
• Focus on diverse or “parallel” cultures
within one society.
• Books showing diversity within (the US)
• Books about “people of color”
• Books in Taiwan about Haaka culture or
aboriginal cultures
International children’s books
• Books originating from outside the country where they
are being read. These books are often translated.
• Books by Jimmy Liao are International children’s lit when
published or read in the US.
• American, British, Australian literature is International lit
in Taiwan.
• They can help children gain an appreciation and
understanding of our global society.
• Translation & Quality
– English text must be fluent and readable yet not too nationalized
(Americanized for example).
– A few regional words and phrases can provide a feel for the
culture and language.
Definitions of multiculturalism
• The doctrine that several different cultures
(rather than one national culture) can coexist
peacefully and equitably in a single country
• In literature, multiculturalism is the belief that
literary studies should include writings, poetry,
folklore, and plays from a number of different
cultures rather than focus on Western European
civilization alone. ...
• A cynical definition (from people who think
multiculturalism favors non-western cultures):
Multiculturalism is a big word meaning, "The
West stinks." The shorthand version is, "America
stinks." Under multiculturalism, George
Washington, a slave-owning white male with no
accomplishments of note, is out, and Che
Guevara, an anti-imperialist leader, is in.
Multiculturalism in the US
• 1960s-70s after civil rights movement and with federal
support, publishers and minority authors were encouraged to
produce books about many different ethnic groups. Minority
authors encouraged to write about their own cultures.
• In late 1970s with reduced federal funding and poor sales in
bookstores (also higher dependence on bookstore sales).
Almost no new authors of color.
• 1980s with clearer statistics and predictions about school
demographics, more concern to multicultural lit again.
• Still now
– the books published about various cultures are still not
representative of the population breakdown.
– Some argue that we should read every text from a multicultural
stance “seek to understand what race, class, and gender means
in a story.”
Exotic Otherness
• The US and other Western
countries have a history of
viewing people of color
differently, often assuming them
to be closer to nature,
theoretically “better” because
they are less civilized. (In much
the same way Rousseau
viewed children as “wise”).
• Edward Said calls this
“Orientalism”
Xenophobia
• Some say that mistrust or fear of strangers or
foreigners is at the root of our worldwide inability
to live together in peace.
• Parents and society often accidentally program
children to mistrust, fear, or even hate certain
groups of people who are unlike them.
• Racial attitudes often crystallize by age ten.
Literature is a powerful force to combat
ignorance that breeds xenophobic behavior.
• If the world changes according to the way
people see it, then changing the ways people
perceive others helps to change the world.
Essentializing
• When people assume there is some identifiable trait or
attitude or practice that is shared by all members of a
culture, they are essentializing.
• If one book about a minority culture is read in order to
represent a culture, readers can think a book
demonstrates the whole experience of that culture
• Colonization of one country by another country was often
justified by assuming there is a fundamental or essential
difference between colonizers and colonized.
• Both positive and negative essentializing denies the
possibility of individual growth or change, or of different
and equally valid was of being from a specific culture.
• Essentializing leads to stereotypes.
Some common Stereotypes
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African Americans are poor
Hispanics are lazy
French people are romantic
Asian are industrious and secretive
Jews are money lovers
Every group is made up of individuals who
have their own set of personal values
Three kinds of books about
people of color
• Neutral – includes characters from cultural minorities but
are essentially about other topics. Neutral books
randomly place multicultural faces among the pages in
order to make a statement about the value of diversity.
• Generic – focuses on characters representing a cultural
group, but few specific details are included that aid in
developing a cultural persona.
• Specific – incorporates specific cultural details that help
define characters. Cultural themes are evident, if not
prevailing. In picture books, the artwork expresses many
of these cultural details.
Judging multicultural literature
• Are characters stereotypes?
• Are characters symbols of their culture or
individuals within their culture?
• Do characters achieve success by giving
up aspects of their culture (melting)?
• Do characters need people from the
mainstream to help them solve problems?
• Accuracy & Authenticity
Accuracy
• When cultural details need to be represented accurately
and in detail, readers can see how they belong to
individuals and not just a culture.
• Dialect and idioms (“the rez” singsong reservation accent)
• Foods (flatbread)
• Customs (Pow-wow, funerals,drinking, spending time together)
• Clothing (Pow-wow outfit, pictures)
• Religious beliefs and practices (referred to with disdain)
• Subgroups within cultural groups
– Not all Native Americans lived in TeePees.
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(Not that different, but still different)
Cultural authenticity
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Those within the culture should feel that the
book has accurately and honestly reflected
their experiences and viewpoints.
Should books about one group be written by
someone from another group?
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How can they know the nuances and precise
feelings?
Do the unintentionally distort because of their
own cultural biases?
The Case of The Education of Little Tree, by
Forrest Carter (really by Asa Earl Carter a
former KKK member)
Only positive portrayals?