Each year leading up to
the announcement of the Newbery and Caldecott awards, there are discussions of eligible books and
attempts to predict the outcomes, while those serving on the committees quietly
go about their work. They are quiet by design: while the award criteria are
public, the work itself takes place in confidentiality that, regardless of
intent and purpose, is also exclusionary.
I understand the desire
for confidentiality during the process, although I don’t think that
confidentiality needs to extend in perpetuity. I was a member of the
Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC) board that voted to ease some of
those rules, making suggestions, nominations and justification statements
accompanying nominations for post-2016 committees available after 50 years. I’d
love to see future boards go farther; for example, allowing the changes to
apply to 2016 and earlier, and expanding the transparency to balloting
results.
My rationale is about
more than desire for greater transparency. I’m concerned that the aura
of secrecy around the Newbery and Caldecott has led to a cult of mystique
surrounding the awards, one that promotes the idea that they are somehow bigger
than the work we do in the field of children’s and young adult literature. In
fact, they are, simply, part of the work we do, and require the same vigilance
as other forms of critique and evaluation when it comes to awareness of how
Whiteness impacts the work we do.
The fields of publishing
and librarianship and criticism, and those of us in them, are struggling and
striving when it comes to understanding this. We still fail more than we thrive
at it.
The Myth of Special
Insight
For me, one example of
our failure is the idea that only those who have served on one of these
committees, who have “been there,” can understand the rigor of the award
process. The “I have served”
argument, intended or not, is an insidious way to silence those who have never
served on the committees, whether in the context of sitting around a table
conversing socially or weighing in on critical issues in our field. The “I have
served” argument automatically puts some of us on the inside and some of us on
the outside. It’s essential to consider the implications of that exclusionary
stance not only in general, but specifically as it relates to White privilege,
given that Newbery and Caldecott committee membership across the years has been
largely inclusive of White people, while Black, Indigenous and People of Color
(BIPOC) are greatly underrepresented.
BIPOC individuals have
served on the Newbery and Caldecott across the years, bringing their own critical
perspectives and experiences, but too often they have been solitary members of
a committee--something slowly, happily, essentially changing. Yet even as ALSC
works toward greater diversity on its award committees, there are barriers that
may preclude some from serving. Some can impact both BIPOC and White people,
including the cost of attending conferences, and employer support for the
necessary time away. There are also barriers that can impact BIPOC
disproportionately, including the critical work they may be doing in other
contexts to push the publishing profession forward when it comes to authentic
representation, and in promoting diverse voices and books. (Today, service on
an ALSC award committee requires giving such work up, or doing it anonymously,
when it comes to eligible books during one’s year of service. Those who serve
agree to this, but it’s a requirement that may make some decline the
opportunity.)
I also find the “I have
served” (with its implied “and therefore understand while you don’t”) argument
problematic because, quite simply, I think it’s untrue. Those who have been on
the Newbery and Caldecott committees don’t have membership in a special club
with a secret password. Nor have we participated in a sacred ritual that gives
us shared insight. My experience on Newbery was deeply satisfying. But the only
deeper insight it gave me was into the dynamic for the year I served,
along with a deeper understanding of how the discussion and critique, as
intense as it is, is also, inevitably, subjective, shaped by who is part of
it.
Subjectivity By Any
Other Name...
The rules of
confidentiality mean the details of how the Newbery and Caldecott committees
arrive at their decision are considered irrelevant in the big picture. And yet,
known or not, those details matter. The individual perspectives of each
committee member matter. Everyone contributes to the discussion and the
dynamic. Everyone contributes to what is—or isn’t—nominated. Everyone
contributes to what is—and isn’t—considered when it comes to individual books
as committee members read and suggest and reread and nominate and discuss the
eligible books in light of the Newbery and Caldecott award criteria.
Committee members’ work
is informed by their individual identities and opinions and insights and
experiences as they participate in a process that is far from empirical,
although it sometimes seems as if we’re expected to believe that it is. The
award criteria they consider to arrive at a decision doesn’t make the
definition of “most distinguished” a fixed, objective target. Nor does the fact
that it’s an effort shared among 15 people working toward numerical consensus.
It is a process deeply informed and shaped by who is participating. And when
award committees have been majority White, there is added danger in not acknowledging
this subjectivity when it comes to thinking about how we do what we do.
I don’t think individual
committees operate with an agenda regarding what kind of book will or won’t
win. But the awards don’t occupy some rarified space in which they aren’t
influenced by the individual identities and group dynamics of those involved in
their choosing. They are influenced by both.
The truth is that each
and every year, a group of different individuals would most likely have chosen
a different winner. In fact, that’s what I
often say when talking about the awards to librarians and teachers. I also note
that these awards are two of many “perspectives on excellence,” to quote a
phrase I learned from Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) Director Emeritus
Ginny Moore Kruse, because there are many children’s and young adult literature
awards, and many wonderful books worthy of acknowledgment each year.
Representation Matters
This doesn’t mean each
and every committee hasn’t worked incredibly hard to reach its decision. This
doesn’t mean winners aren’t chosen with integrity. But it does mean that
representation matters, in books, and on the committees, and even, perhaps, in
what is—or isn’t—stated in the award criteria and definitions.
ALSC added a statement about
“Diversity and ALSC Media Award Evaluation” to all its award and notable
committee manuals in 2015. Among other things, it states,
As individuals serving
on committees evaluate materials according to the criteria outlined for their
specific charge, they should strive to be aware of how their own perspectives
and experiences shape their responses to materials. Every committee member
brings unique strengths to the table, but every committee member also brings
gaps in knowledge and understanding, and biases. Committee members are
strongly encouraged to be open to listening and learning as well as sharing as
they consider materials representing diverse experiences both familiar and
unfamiliar to them.
This statement touches on the ideas of cultural competence and cultural humility without
naming them, but I wonder what it would look like to have tenets of cultural
competence and cultural humility built into the definitions and/or criteria for
individual awards as committee members are asked to consider what it means for
a book to be “distinguished.” (Or, as Hal Schrieve asked, how can the award decenter Whiteness?)
How, for example, might
the Newbery criteria stating “Presentation of
information including accuracy, clarity, and organization” be further
clarified, especially around that thorny concept of “accuracy”? What might be
explicitly asked of both the books and of committee members evaluating a work
when it comes to an author writing about—and committee members reading
about—experiences beyond those they’ve lived or have close knowledge of? In
what way might committee members not just be asked but required to consider
their own cultural identities in relation to the works they are evaluating and
the comments of one another? How might the definitions and criteria for these
awards reflect White privilege in ways I don’t even see? (I am aware that
ALSC may be limited by legal agreements under which the awards were established
when it comes to the “terms,” which is why I’m referring here only to
“definitions” and “criteria.”)
I have been skirting
around these ideas, and hesitating on this post, for awhile. I don’t want to
silence or ignore the history or experiences of BIPOC who have served on award
committees. I don’t want to ignore or diminish the contributions of anyone who
has served on the committees, which are an incredible commitment of time and
effort. Nor do I want to diminish the honor of being chosen a winner or honor
recipient.
But my biggest concern
is that I don’t know all the questions to ask, let alone have the
answers. What I do know is that critical perspectives on how the Newbery
and Caldecott are chosen are not the sole purview of those who have served on
the committees.
Megan Schliesman