Confessions of a Formerly Color Blind Reader
First, read this post by David Anthony Durham about the oft used argument of being a ‘color blind’ reader.
I’m a pretty standard example of an American upper-middle class upbringing and could serve as a great example of the term W.A.S.P. (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant). As such, I’m almost certain that I’ve at some point claimed to be ‘color blind’ regarding reading and some issue or another – and when I made the claims I considered this to be a positive example of a lack of racism.
Over the last several years I’ve noticed that I can’t really make that argument anymore. I actively seek out diversity of one kind or another in my reading. I want to read a book from a different perspective. I bought ___ because the author is from Columbia, and ___ because it’s originally a Russian work, and ____ because it’s from Japan, and ___ because her perspective sounds intriguing, and ____ because he’s African, and ____ because he’s homosexual, etc. Were these the only reasons – maybe? I don’t know, but they were reasons. And I certainly don’t do this for every book I get – I get a lot of books because they sound good (and I may not know anything about that author), and I of course get books specifically because I know of the author even if I don’t know of that particular book. But, I can say that I know longer buy books blindly, and my reading experience has been greatly enhanced as a result.
And in spite of the entire previous paragraph, a study of my bookshelf would reveal that a large majority of the books were written by white males. It sure makes me think.
7 comments:
Awesome, Neth. Thinking is exactly what we should be doing. Thing about thinking, though, is that if you do it enough you often find your original assumptions/positions may not be as strong as you'd like to believe. That seems to scare people away from thinking.
Anyway, I think the way you're approaching reading and looking toward the future is great. We need more like you!
Oh, and thanks for the the link.
I think a lot of us will be blogging about David's post in the next few days. I'm formulating a post, myself.
Agreed - a thoughtful post! I will try to post about this in a few days as well.
Thanks David - it was a great post and it's getting an appropriate amount of attention around the web it seems. Lots of people talking about which is good.
Hmm, this is the third post I have seen on this topic. Conindicence, likely. I must say I don't pay any attention to the author of a random book I pick up, unless I really try to remember the name so I can pick up something else by them. Often I tend to have problems remembering the names anyway and have to search out the series again. I am sure my gender, culture, race and such influence my writing a great deal and in ways I am certainly unaware of (and some I am aware of), but as a reader gender and race don't even occur to me... it is the title, blurb and cover art that either sell me or not on a book.
After the article was posted, I did a search through my books (all 1100+ of them). Throwing out the roughly 200 that were holdovers from my academic days, I noticed the following:
About 120 out of 900 or so were by women. About 30 were in English/translation by PoC. Another 150 or so were in Spanish by Latinos of various stripes. And the disparities were worst for spec fic works, which at around 1/3 of my total fiction has skewed the results a lot. It is interesting to see/note this, as it gives me more to consider for later, which is a good first step on that journey of a thousand miles, no? :P
Well, I'm definitely late to this party, but I did post on this theme over at http://www.booksunderthebridge.com/ - I'd be glad to see you all stop by!
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