Ugh, you are right. Sure, it seems like most of the participants on the media fandom side are seeing the white privilege issues in this particular go-round, but in a lot of ways that is hard-won education showing, through multiple rounds of race dustup, through Kristallnacht RPG and characters of color turned into cats, with one community slowly learning through trial and effort and the seemingly endless hard work of FoC and allies.
I think you got a fairly accurate perspective of what's going on on the mailing list from this one particular dustup, as well. Debbie does have supporters over there, both in this individual argument and in general, but for the most part, she is the only person who brings up those issues with regards to race on that list, and pretty much always about Native issues. A lot of problematic stuff does sail by the list unchallenged. It's a very well-meaning group about diversity, in that particular white privilege way in which Elizabeth Bear's original post was well-meaning: how best to serve children by giving them books about their own experience, which is very frequently not the experience of the person posting. It's incredibly well-meaning. And, you know, problematic. (And, I admit, the position that I come from myself, the media fandom has done wonders in helping me start to break out of.)
(Not that the list is monolithically white, by any means. Julius Lester, Roxanne Hsu Feldman, and Debbie herself are among the prominent members of color on the list. But for whatever reasons, children's literature scholarship and children's librarianship are fairly white fields in many English-speaking countries.)
no subject
I think you got a fairly accurate perspective of what's going on on the mailing list from this one particular dustup, as well. Debbie does have supporters over there, both in this individual argument and in general, but for the most part, she is the only person who brings up those issues with regards to race on that list, and pretty much always about Native issues. A lot of problematic stuff does sail by the list unchallenged. It's a very well-meaning group about diversity, in that particular white privilege way in which Elizabeth Bear's original post was well-meaning: how best to serve children by giving them books about their own experience, which is very frequently not the experience of the person posting. It's incredibly well-meaning. And, you know, problematic. (And, I admit, the position that I come from myself, the media fandom has done wonders in helping me start to break out of.)
(Not that the list is monolithically white, by any means. Julius Lester, Roxanne Hsu Feldman, and Debbie herself are among the prominent members of color on the list. But for whatever reasons, children's literature scholarship and children's librarianship are fairly white fields in many English-speaking countries.)