WARNING: This Book Might Be Recalled. Read it Fast. Decry it Even Faster.

I'm all for truth and justice, but I question Scholastic's recent decision to recall a book .

First, the slope is too slippery when it comes to removing published books from our schools and libraries. What about books published last year? Ten years ago? A century ago? Should they be recalled also? Should we protect today's children from the positive depictions of colonialism in TINTIN IN THE CONGO and BABAR by recalling them? What about black Asia and Silas standing in the back of the room in LITTLE MEN and JO'S BOYS? I'm not defending the contents of A BIRTHDAY CAKE FOR GEORGE WASHINGTON, but it was published. Shouldn't it stay in the pantheon of our shared intellectual content? I suppose this raises another question in an age of fuzzy publishing boundaries: is preventing a published book from being read different than stopping a pre-published book from being read? Librarians, champions of intellectual content, please weigh in.

Third, instead of recalling, the publisher could move us forward in the representation of African-Americans in children's literature. For example, why doesn't Scholastic invite their wonderful editor, Andrea Davis Pinkney, long-time champion of books representing the African-American experience and one of the few African American editors in the industry, to call for great submissions telling Hercules' WHOLE story? Then the company can publish two more top-notch picture books about Hercules and Delia and encourage teachers and parents to read all three with children. This way, the next generation can learn to discern the differences themselves. Scholastic can underline the danger of a single story , support a great editor, encourage other authors and illustrators who care about telling the stories of African Americans, keep the memory of Hercules and Delia alive, and continue to remind all of us that our first President owned slaves.

But I fear this won't happen. It's too late. The shouts have been heard. The book is recalled. I hope we aren't veering towards recalls steered by social media because outcry can go many ways. It's thrilling that depictions of kids on the margins, past and present, are now questioned and debated with passion and fury. That's the real victory, and the best modeling for the next generation. ‪

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Published on January 17, 2016 18:05
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message 1: by Marcy (new)

Marcy Books that were written in the past, with its biases, should not be recalled. But publishing a book in 2016 that depicts happy slaves, is a large enough issue to pull the book. I balked just at the cover, and would not read that to students. The single story in the recalled book does not depict the majority of the stories depicted in the history we all know. I do agree, however, that "shouts," mainly I hear from groups of parents who claim they are "politically correct," want all textbooks, even those not that old, taken away and burned, to be replaced by better textbooks because two lines are offensive. There is such a thing as a teachable moment if one is not afraid of addressing that moment. One 7th/8th grade teacher had his students build a structure out of all the textbooks and brainwashed the kids that all textbooks are biased and bad. I shudder to think how the high school teachers who use textbooks in an appropriate way will teach those same children. I believe that information should be questioned and debated. Having said all this, this particular Scholastic book was beyond the couple of lines of bias.


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