Today, members of the children’s
literature community ask for action and change from the curators of an exhibit currently housed at the University of Minnesota.
Please read the letter below and
leave a comment that includes your name if you would like to lend your support. (If
you have trouble commenting, please email us at readingwhilewhite@gmail.com with
the text of your comment, and we will gladly post it on your behalf.)
[Ed. 9am 5/9/19: Please note that we will wrap up signature gathering at 4:30 pm EST today (Thursday, May 9), and will also close comments at that time. We will send this letter with signatures to the Kerlan Board this afternoon at their board meeting. Ed. 4:30pm 5/9/19: Comments for this post are now closed.]
May 8,
2019
Leonard
S. Marcus and Lisa Von Drasek, Curators
Members
of the Kerlan Board
The
ABC of It: Why Children’s Books Matter
Children’s
Literature Research Collections (CLRC Kerlan)
Anderson
Library, University of Minnesota
Dear Mr.
Marcus and Ms. Von Drasek,
We write
to you today to ask for a public response to concerns regarding the erasure of
racism in books and by authors featured in the exhibit, The ABC of It: Why Children’s Books Matter, that was first mounted at The
New York Public Library in 2013 and brought to the University of Minnesota CLRC
with an accompanying book in February of 2019.
Racism
in societal institutions is more visible than ever and is being addressed in
museums, schools, and in the children’s book industry. In this moment, the
exhibit that proclaims that “children’s books matter” uses children’s books and
words about those books to tell Indigenous People and People of Color that
their children’s experiences with anti-Native and racist books do not matter.
Before
the exhibit’s opening events on February 26 and 27, Trisha Speed Shaskan and
other children’s book authors questioned Von Drasek on her directive to
docents:
“Don’t
be political. Do be culturally sensitive. For example Dr. Seuss was a
racist. Yes he was, there is certainly a time and a place to discuss this.
Comments can be put on post-its on the second floor. Caddie Woodlawn is racist.
Yes it is. Again we welcome discussion. This exhibit is through one lens, there
are others.” (Lisa Von Drasek, docent training document)
We are
astonished that while Von Drasek acknowledged the well-documented histories of
these books’ racist content, she refused to add new signage. Instead, she added
a display of academic articles in the corner of the second floor. The exhibit
opened and was not well-received by many members of the children’s literature
community, particularly because neither the February 26 nor February 27 event
included Q&A opportunities to publicly address these concerns with both
Leonard Marcus and Lisa Von Drasek. On March 6, Von Drasek added signage to a
few of the exhibits, but their placement and size are insufficient. She also
began publishing a series of blog posts addressing the racism in Seuss and Caddie
Woodlawn on the UMN Continuum’s Blue Ox Review
page, but when they were criticized, they were revised, deleted, and
republished again, without explanation.
Another
response was to announce the “The ABC of It: Whose Story is Being Told? Race, Inclusion, and Representation in Children’s Literature” panel, to be held on May 10.
Katie Ishizuka and Ramón Stephens, authors of an article on Seuss, and Dawn Quigley, author of an article on Caddie Woodlawn, were invited to speak on the
panel. When Ishizuka and Stephens learned about the whiteness and whitewashing
of the exhibit and hostile responses to those who had spoken out about it, they
communicated their concerns to Von Drasek in writing and verbally. Von Drasek
failed to address, or even acknowledge, any of their concerns, which reflected
the collective concerns of their colleagues of color, who have been silenced,
ignored, gaslighted, and further marginalized through this process. In protest
of the individual and institutional racism occurring around the exhibit, they
canceled their participation in the panel.
On
Friday, May 3, the panel was canceled because the fourth panelist, Andrea Davis
Pinkney, was not able to attend. The web page with that announcement indicated
that it may be rescheduled. There was no invitation to ask other panelists, or
for the event to continue with Dawn Quigley.
While
blog posts and panels can be useful, they are ultimately of no use to the
initial visitors who went through the exhibit without the new signage providing
some context to artists like Theodor Geisel or with books like Caddie
Woodlawn and Little Black Sambo. As well, they are of little use to
those reading the accompanying book.
Given
the totality of these events, and because the exhibit is expected to travel to
new communities, we the undersigned members of the children’s book community in
Minnesota and beyond, recognize that the CLRC is an essential and respected
institution in the study of children’s literature and therefore respectfully
request that the CLRC:
1.
Acknowledge
that The ABC of It exhibit and book were flawed in their inception and
execution
2.
Explain
why blog posts were posted, revised, deleted, and re-posted without comment
3.
Update
the accompanying The ABC of It book to include more context for Seuss, Caddie
Woodlawn, and other problematic works as identified
4.
Agree
that the exhibit, as it travels to new communities, and the digital educational
materials to be launched in September 2019, will contain the additional signage
and/or more information
5.
Include
the BIPOC literary community in future exhibit- and event-planning committees.
We await
your reply.
Sincerely,
John
Coy, children’s book author, former Kerlan Board member and Kerlan Award winner
Sarah
Park Dahlen, Associate Professor and former Kerlan Board member
Shannon
Gibney
Katie
Ishizuka, The Conscious Kid
Dawn
Quigley (Turtle Mountain Ojibwe), Asst professor, children's book author
Debbie
Reese (Nambé Pueblo), American Indians in Children’s Literature; 2019 Arbuthnot
Lecturer
Stephen
Shaskan, current Kerlan Board member, children’s book author & illustrator
Trisha
Speed Shaskan, Kerlan volunteer, children’s book author
Ramón
Stephens, The Conscious Kid
Martha
Brockenbrough, children’s book author
Anne
Ursu, children’s book author
Kelly
Barnhill, children’s book author
Edith
Campbell, librarian; blogger
Nina
Victor Crittenden, children’s book illustrator and author
Sarah
Hamburg
Laura
Hamor
Sarah
Warren, children’s book author/early childhood educator
Kirstin
Cronn-Mills, children’s book author and educator
H.M.
Bouwman, Professor and children’s author
Dr.
Laura M. Jimenez, Boston University
Sally
Morgan, children’s book author
Kristin
Johnson, children’s book author, writing instructor
Stephanie
Watson, children’s book author
Cristina
Rhodes, PhD
Bao Phi,
Children’s Book author
Andrew
Karre
Megan
Maynor, children’s book author
Swati
Avasthi, children’s book author and professor
John
Yopp
Nicholas
Yopp
Savita
Yopp, student
Molly
Beth Griffin, children’s book author and educator
Ebony
Elizabeth Thomas
Susan
Marie Swanson, children’s book author and educator
Tasslyn
Magnusson, PhD, poet and children’s book author
Olivia
Ghafoerkhan, children’s book author and professor
Cori
Doerrfeld, children’s book author and illustrator
Regina
Santiago
Chayse
Sundt, youth librarian
Mike
Jung, children’s book author
Kristin
McIlhagga, PhD
Megan
Atwood, children’s book author and professor
Kate
Messner, children’s book author and educator
Marcie
Rendon, author
Charlotte
Sullivan Wild, children's book author, former educator
Jean
Mendoza, PhD
Laura
Ruby, children’s book author and educator
Peter
Pearson, children’s book author
Sherrie
Fernandez-Williams
Links to
more information regarding the exhibit:
●
Kirch,
Claire. 2019 January 10. Kerlan Collection Adapts 2013 ‘The ABC of It’ Exhibition. Publishers Weekly.
●
Reese.
Debbie. 2019 March 6. Debbie. A Critical Review of THE ABC OF IT: WHY CHILDREN’S BOOKS MATTER by Leonard Marcus. American Indians in
Children’s Literature blog.
●
Kirch,
Claire. 2019 March 7. ‘The ABC of It’ Opens at the Kerlan Collection: A Photo Essay. Publishers Weekly.
●
Kirch,
Claire. 2019 March 12. An ABC of Controversy: The Kerlan Collection Tweaks Exhibit in Response to Concerns about Racism. Publishers Weekly.
●
Reese,
Debbie. 2019 May 2. A Brief Visit to Minneapolis. Twitter.
295 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 295 of 295Curators/UoM - Is it really that hard to get your head out of your collective arses? Do better, do it now
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I hope this situation will be righted and made just immediately.
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We need to make sure that nobody is excluded from children's literature because of color, religion, orientation, etc.
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Please realize that children’s literature is a major force in indoctrinating *all* of our kids into accepting white supremacy. It is for this reason that those working within this field must take extra care in dismantling all the ways white supremacy rears its ugly & violent head. I agree with this letter wholeheartedly.
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Dana Mele, author
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Emily Richardson
The curator and board of the Kerlan Collection as leaders in the field of children’s literature, have a responsibility to be truthful and clear-eyed about equity, bias, and out-right discrimination. The charges made against the ABC exhibit need to be addressed for all of us to learn, move forward, and heal from the continuing misguided approach of the Kerlan’s leaders we have witnessed so far.
-Caren Stelson
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