Friday, February 7, 2014

The Danger of "Casual Diversity"


A couple of days ago, Betsy Bird wrote a post about children’s books promoting “casual diversity” for her blog on the School Library Journal website.  After defining the term – “diversity [that] is just a part of everyday life” – she provides a list of books that “integrate [diversity] into the storyline without a hitch.”

Those statements made me a tad uncomfortable.  I worry because diversity isn’t casual.

True casual diversity can only exist in a perfect world.  Ideally, people of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds would value and appreciate each other, and everyone would recognize that differences are normal.  But discrimination, inequality, and intolerance based on ethnicity and culture still exist, as we can see clearly from the banning of Mexican-American Studies classes in Tucson and the unprovoked detention of black shoppers at Barney's in New York.  Those are just two high-profile examples of how ethnicity and culture still cause tension every day and everywhere.

Is it beneficial to create and read books in which characters of different backgrounds are presented naturally, authentically, and in a manner that affirms their cultural identities?  Yes!  Do the plots of books featuring diverse characters always need to focus on racism?   No.  But we also need books that explicitly confront inequities.  Ignoring the racism that surrounds us only allows it to fester, so we can’t rest comfortably on casual diversity, expecting it to erase intolerance.

5 comments:

  1. Well said Marianne - it's both/and. Too many adults are not even able to embrace the "casual diversity" of a Cheerios or Coke commercial.

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    1. Thanks, JoBeth! I've discovered that embracing balance is the key to so many things -- teaching methods, choosing books for the classroom, etc. And I still can't believe the backlash over those commercials :(

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  3. Marianne: Great post, great blog! You used the term "naturally," which seems just about right for stories with diverse characters--especially protagonists--that widen the scope beyond racism. And heaven knows I favor addressing racism! Thank you for shedding more light on these issues.

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Lila -- I really appreciate your feedback, and I'm looking forward to hearing you speak at the Latin@ Children's Lit conference in a couple of weeks!

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