WRITING MEMORABLE WORDS is about connecting with readers and leaving memories behind. TO COMMENT, CLICK ON THE TITLE OF THE POST, PLEASE.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
Writing as a Sacred Mission
Friday, May 22, 2015
A NEW USE FOR THE HASHTAG #NOFILTER
A popular Instagram #hashtag these days is #nofilter, indicating that the beauty captured by the photographer in the posted photo is completely natural, without any augmentation by the application's supplied "filters" for editing. The #nofilter means that, in contrast with other doctored photos on the site, the photo bearing this hashtag is more worthy of awe.
I find it amusing to ponder another meaning of "no filter": the meaning applied to people who have no sense of what NOT to share in public. Wouldn't it be appropriate to add #nofilter to the comments sections of posts on Facebook, Tumbler, and Twitter in which people post excessively intimate confessions, hateful rants, sexually explicit photos, grossly descriptive medical information, and mean-spirited gossip? And to be sure that the hashtag's non-photographic meaning is understood, an accompanying hashtag could appear: #TMI (for Too Much Information). Instead of cringing as we read lengthy posts featuring someone's blow-by-blow bout of gastrointestinal problems, recollections of extreme familial dysfunction, or bigoted diatribes tantamount to verbal hate crimes, we would simply add to the comments section #nofilter to alert the post-writer to the fact they he/she has offended us. In this way, offended folks could avoid further pollution of the internet with their own unfiltered retorts to TMI, as well as avoid prematurely"unfriending" someone before giving the offender a chance to reform via a polite hashtag reminder.
Just a whimsical thought for the day...
If you leave me a #nofilter message in the comments section, I'll consider self-editing for the future! (;
Friday, February 27, 2015
We Need Diverse Books To Enlighten, Not To Enforce Enlightenment
On Diversity in Literature and #WNDB
By Susan L. Lipson
I wish that discussions of the need
for diversity in literature (#WNDB, a.k.a. We Need Diverse Books) focused more on
realistically presenting the glorious array of humanity in literature than on zealously
defying stereotypes. Defiance through diversity implies a defensiveness that ironically
gives power to the stereotypes and undermines the very reasons behind the need
for the #WNDB movement. I equate this to the use of the word “tolerance” to
promote programs of unity among people, while paradoxically suggesting that
differences must be “tolerated” (i.e., endured or allowed, implying a
superiority of the one who must “tolerate” another). “Respect” is a much more
apt term for the encouragement of open-mindedness and social harmony. And
“diversity” in literature should encourage
and facilitate respect, not enforce tolerance.
Similarly, the inclusion of the
term “white privilege” in discussions of diversity in literature only serves as
a finger-wagging kind of term to divide—and not even accurately—readers into
the following subgroups: white people who have economic, educational, and
social privileges and black people who do not. What about the white people who
live in poverty—are they still “privileged”? Or the black people who are
doctors, lawyers, authors, teachers, scientists, artists, etc.—are they
“underprivileged”? Or the white people who are privileged in some aspects, but
discriminated against in others—such as religion or sexual identity? Or the
black people who are considered “privileged” by the “underprivileged” within
their own racial group, and disdained as being “too white”? Or the non-white,
non-black people who are left out of the discussion about “privilege” as the
social illness that requires the good medicine provided by “diverse books” to
heal the world? How can such divisiveness have arisen from a movement designed
to grow inclusiveness?
Recently, an online debate I had
with another writer about a reference to “white privilege” led to my being
questioned about my understanding of “white privilege,” which the other writer
defined as “white readers seeing diverse media starring people-of-color as ‘not
for me.’” I pointed out that the term “white” in her definition is inadequate,
since I teach many Asian students, and I have seen a few hesitate to read books
I’ve handed to them that feature black kids as protagonists, whereas I’ve never
seen such hesitation about books that feature white kid protagonists. I
distinctly remember one such student saying to me, after reading a novel by
Sharon Flake, “I never would have picked this up on my own, and I’m really glad
you gave it to me. It was really good.” The term “white privilege” clearly is not applicable to a non-white reader
who avoids books about “people-of-color” when she herself has brown skin. Also,
what is the actual “privilege”—is it a socioeconomic advantage or a naïve
mindset about the “underprivileged”?
One of my former students, a privileged black girl with a lawyer and a doctor for parents, who grew up in a predominantly non-black,
upper-middle class neighborhood of whites and Asians, once told me that she
found it offensive that she, a suburban
black girl, had no black characters representing her in literature. I told her that I could relate to that because most of the Jewish kids in books I'd read were nothing like me at all; they showed up in Holocaust stories, or turn-of-the-century immigrant tales, or stories about Orthodox Jewish life, so unlike my own. The absence of people like us in literature is disappointing for us personally, but even more disappointing for the reasons that people unlike us know us only through outdated or stereotypical characters. Diversity must focus on realistic portrayals more than tokenism.
This exploration of the admirable, yet sometimes flawed #WNDB movement leads
me to conclude that diversity in literature is not just about characters
representing various races, cultures, religions, sexual identities, or
physically challenged lifestyles. It’s not just about publishing books by
authors who are “people-of-color” or of nonmainstream lifestyles (however "mainstream" is defined by publishers). But it is about opening our minds and our media to sharing stories about memorable,
realistic people from all walks of life, as a means of broadening all readers’ perspectives and making
readers not just see themselves in characters, but see themselves in relation to both familiar and
unfamiliar characters. Diversity is universalism.
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