On Writing PoC When You Are White -- (People of Colour/Color)
I just came across this and thought I'd share:
How to Write Protagonists of Colour When You’re White
20 June, 2016
http://justinelarbalestier.com/blog/2016/06/20/how-to-write-protagonists-of-colour-when-youre-white/
https://twitter.com/JustineLavaworm/status/744877388920668160
All writers need to have the ego it requires to write. But we white writers also need to step back from feeling we have the right to write the stories of people with less power than ourselves. Especially because every year more books by whites are published than by any other race. In YA, not only are the majority of books by white people, so are the majority of books about PoC and Native peoples. When we write these books we are literally keeping books by PoC and Native writers off the shelves.
Outside of my books with multiple protags, I now only write white protagonists because I realised that I was part of the problem of lack of diversity in YA, not the solution.
There are books by white writers with PoC protagonists that are loved by some people in those communities. But I think we white writers can do more good by calling attention to the books by PoC and Indigenous writers and by thinking about PoC and Indigenous readers.
... ... ... ... ...
Everyone’s identity is complicated. All of us belong to different religions, cultures, subcultures, groups, clubs, kinship networks. We all come from particular families. One of the most common complaints I hear about white people writing Indigenous and PoC characters is that we leave out their families and friendships with people like them. We tend to give them absent brown families and present white friends.
On Writing PoC When You Are White
20 October, 2015
http://justinelarbalestier.com/blog/2015/10/20/on-writing-poc-when-you-are-white/
http://ccbc.education.wisc.edu/books/pcstats.asp
PoC = People of Colour/Color
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