Do black children's lives matter if nobody writes about them? [View all]
Besides teaching us who we are, books are where we learn who is important enough to read about and only 5% of kids books had black characters last year
Literatures job is not to protect young people from the ugly world; it is to arm them with a language to describe difficult truths they already know.
In times of crisis or unrest, Ferguson municipal public library director Scott Bonner wrote in an email conversation, everyone, but especially kids, will have questions that tie to identity, empathy, sense of belonging vs exclusion, seeking a role to play, and so forth. Bonner turned the FMPL into a safe haven during the civil unrest in 2014, earning it a Library of the Year award and international acclaim.
Books help us know who we are, he added, and we must know who we are before we can understand what we must do.
Besides teaching us who we are, books are where we learn whose lives matter enough to read about: a recent Florida State University study called childrens literature a dominant blueprint of shared cultural values, meanings and expectations. Exclusion from this world, the study says, constitutes a kind of symbolic annihilation. As suicide rates among black youth skyrocket, and police officers justify killing unarmed children, the annihilation becomes much more than symbolic.
The ongoing crisis of state-sanctioned violence and antiblackness in America is not a new problem, but sustained protests have forced the world take note of it. And while some individual writers have spoken up, the Young Adult industry has had little to say about what the New York Times called the most formidable protest movement of the 21st century to date.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/nov/06/do-black-childrens-lives-matter-if-nobody-writes-about-them