🐱 Do Sensitivity Readers Result in Better Books, or Censorship

CatParty
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/24/...ers-result-in-better-books-or-censorship.html

Late last year, the novelist Keira Drake announced that her publisher was giving away copies of her upcoming young adult novel, “The Continent,” a fantasy set in a world where two nations have been at war for centuries. “It’s raining books!” she wrote.

Her enthusiasm was quickly punctured. Online reviews poured in, and they were brutal. Readers pounced on what they saw as racially charged language in the descriptions of the warring tribes and blasted it as “racist trash,” “retrograde” and “offensive.” Ms. Drake and her publisher, Harlequin Teen, apologized and delayed the book’s publication.

In the year since, “The Continent” has changed drastically. Harlequin hired two sensitivity readers, who vetted the narrative for harmful stereotypes and suggested changes. Ms. Drake spent six months rewriting the book, discarding descriptions like her characterization of one tribe as having reddish-brown skin and painted faces. The new version is due out in March.

In today’s hair-trigger, hyperreactive social media landscape, where a tweet can set off a cascade of outrage and prompt calls for a book’s cancellation, children’s book authors and publishers are taking precautions to identify potential pitfalls in a novel’s premise or execution. Many are turning to sensitivity readers, who provide feedback on issues like race, religion, gender, sexuality, chronic illness and physical disabilities. The role that readers play in shaping children’s books has become a flash point in a fractious debate about diversity, cultural appropriation and representation, with some arguing that the reliance on sensitivity readers amounts to censorship.

Behind the scenes, these readers are having a profound impact on children’s literature, reshaping stories in big and small ways before they reach impressionable young audiences. Like fact checkers or copy editors, sensitivity readers can provide a quality-control backstop to avoid embarrassing mistakes, but they specialize in the more fraught and subjective realm of guarding against potentially offensive portrayals of minority groups, in everything from picture books to science fiction and fantasy novels.

“There is a newfound fervor in children’s publishing to be authentic and get the story right,” said David Levithan, vice president and publisher of Scholastic Press, which regularly seeks advice from sensitivity readers. “When any author is writing outside their own experience, we want to make sure they’ve done their homework.”

Some see a downside to publishers’ growing reliance on sensitivity readers, and warn that it could lead to sanitized books that tiptoe around difficult topics. Skeptics say the heightened scrutiny discourages authors from writing about cultures other than their own, resulting in more homogenized literature. “Can we no longer read ‘Othello’ because Shakespeare wasn’t black?” the novelist Francine Prose wrote recently in an essay about sensitivity readers and censorship in The New York Review of Books.

Others have echoed that view, arguing that sensitivity readers might have derailed works like William Styron’s “The Confessions of Nat Turner,” Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” or Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” After the subject was covered in Slate, a writer for National Review fretted that “if ‘sensitivity readers’ are given the freedom to hijack authors’ visions, we’re going to lose some beloved works of art that we could have otherwise enjoyed.”

Advocates of the practice say sensitivity readers aren’t preventing authors from tackling tough subjects or writing cross-culturally, but helping to guard against misrepresentation.

“It’s a craft issue; it’s not about censorship,” said Dhonielle Clayton, a former librarian and writer who has evaluated more than 30 children’s books as a sensitivity reader this year. “We have a lot of people writing cross-culturally, and a lot of people have done it poorly and done damage.”

Sensitivity readers are hardly new, and publishers have long relied on experts, like historians, psychologists, lawyers and police officers, to make sure a fictional narrative rings true. More than 30 years ago, Scholastic hired child psychologists to evaluate the plotlines and dialogue in its best-selling series “The Baby-Sitters Club,” because the novels dealt with touchy topics like eating disorders and divorce. But sensitivity readers have become far more prevalent in children’s publishing in recent years, following a cascade of controversies over books that some readers found racist, homophobic or otherwise culturally tone-deaf.

Last year, Scholastic pulled its picture book “A Birthday Cake for George Washington” from stores after criticism that it soft-pedaled slavery by leaving out the grimmer details of the life of an enslaved baker, who eventually escaped. Candlewick Press postponed the young adult novel “When We Was Fierce,” by e.E. Charlton-Trujillo, after some readers complained the book reinforced negative stereotypes of inner-city youth. “The Black Witch,” Laurie Forest’s young adult fantasy novel about a teenage girl who is raised in a xenophobic society that prizes magical ability, drew virulent criticism from readers who said it was racist, sexist and homophobic, and received around 800 negative ratings on Goodreads. And this year, Laura Moriarty’s planned dystopian novel, “American Heart,” was savaged, nine months before its release, by critics who faulted what they viewed as a “white savior narrative.”

The outrage isn’t confined to children’s literature. The debate over cultural appropriation has roiled the adult literary world as well, and even prominent adult novelists have started turning to sensitivity readers.

For her 2016 novel, “Small Great Things,” about a black nurse who treats the baby of white supremacists, Jodi Picoult recruited several minorities, including Nic Stone, an African-American novelist and the author of the best-seller “Dear Martin,” to critique an early draft. Ms. Stone’s feedback helped Ms. Picoult contextualize racism from the perspective of an African-American, Ms. Picoult said in an email. Ms. Stone, who has worked as a sensitivity reader on more than a dozen books, also vetted “Godsgrave,” an adult novel by Jay Kristoff that takes place in a fantasy world where there is slavery.

In children’s publishing, where there’s a huge demand for diverse books, sensitivity readers have practically become a routine part of the editing process. To anticipate blind spots before they ignite full-blown social media conflagrations, some publishers and authors are soliciting feedback in advance from readers who share a cultural background or other traits with the characters.

For her recent middle-grade novel, “Ghosts of Greenglass House,” which features a boy named Milo whose parents adopted him from China, Kate Milford hired three readers who were adopted internationally by white American families to evaluate the book. After receiving their feedback, she tweaked the language in places and expanded a character’s role. In one small but meaningful change that a sensitivity reader suggested, she stopped referring to Milo’s mother and father as his adoptive parents, and simply called them his parents.
 
In the year since, “The Continent” has changed drastically. Harlequin hired two sensitivity readers, who vetted the narrative for harmful stereotypes and suggested changes. Ms. Drake spent six months rewriting the book, discarding descriptions like her characterization of one tribe as having reddish-brown skin and painted faces. The new version is due out in March.
So, their idea of positive representation and diversity was a to essentially genocide a fictious ethnicity and erase their identity from the book and replace them with a more "desireable" version? :story:

All I'm getting here is that crybabies are offended by some minor thing and thus force the writer and the publisher to essentially pull out the creation's teeth and make everything bland and inoffensive.
That is not how you make a good book, no matter whether it's for a young audience or not.

I can understand why publishers do this, though - publishing a book is expensive and you can't risk a failure, so you have to change it.
But this sensitivity bullshit is censorship, no matter how you look at it. It tries to dictate what kind of content and what kind of language can be used and who is allowed to have what kind of perspective.
How is this supposed to make a book more readable, enjoyable and better?
I would love to have these clowns give their opinion on a book about jews in ww2 Germany. They'd undoubtedly demand that the author should remove the "antisemitism" like Wehrmachts-Soldiers calling jews "kikes" or something, even though that would be the whole point of the fucking book.

“We have a lot of people writing cross-culturally, and a lot of people have done it poorly and done damage.”
Oh, I would love to hear what kind of damage they did.

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She should just shut the fuck up, Jesus Christ. Her perspective on the matter of black slavery is as removed from that topic as is the perspective of anyone else, be their skin black, white or green. Unless, of course, she's 150+ years old.

Melanin does not make you an expert on slavery by default.
 
Oh boy are those sensitivity writers going to have an aneurysm when I finally send my book The Nigger Muslim Who Blows up Christmas, for review.
They'll just have you change it to The Disabled but HAES Transgender Nigger Muslim Who Blows Up Christmas.
Representation Matters.
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Use this picture for the About the Author space.
 
Sensitivity readers are hardly new, and publishers have long relied on experts, like historians, psychologists, lawyers and police officers, to make sure a fictional narrative rings true

Those experts are experts in specific things though. What are Sensitivity Readers experts in?


Being anti-Racist is now racist. I still can't get over that even though its been a few years since I've been introduced to this topsy-turvy idea.

Also this chick is a lolcow and needs a thread.
 
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I wonder if this nonsense is why Brandon Sanderson isn't going to be writing a sequel to The Rithmatist? Or at any rate not any time soon. Liked the book a lot more than I thought I would, and figured because it was Sanderson and not Martin or Rothfuss I'd be safe to read it, assuming the sequel would be along in about 20 minutes, given he writes about eight books a year or so.

89,921 word or so blog entry he cranked out a few days ago.

Image of passage relevant to the series...

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Kind of ridiculous because the usual suspects pretty much have to hate him. He's a white male and a practicing Mormon. Probably because he's published by the SJW circle jerk that is Tor.

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Also, am I not seeing this correctly? That creature looks more like a white troon than it does any sort of vagina enabled non-white female.
 
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This is a dumb idea that only people who want to live in a hugbox would find good.

Fiction may be an escape from reality, but that doesn't mean it's always going to be a pleasant escape, and that's good, because upsetting literature is part and parcel of expanding one's intellectual horizons and inculcating oneself to opinions and ideas they might not like but will have to learn to live with, and if they can't handle fiction being a harsh world that gives no shits about their feels, one wonders how they are able to cope with reality, which, despite their best efforts, is even more merciless in being a realm where you either deal with it or decide to end it all.
 
Who the fuck is this entitled twat? When I was in high school my American literature class had readings from a multiracial pool of authors, including Zora Neale-Hurston and Langston Hughes who she mentioned. I'd imagine most places would do the same.
I bet she's just mad her parents named her Dhonielle (which she says is pronounced like 'Don' or 'Dawn'...they couldn't even call her something with one pronunciation!)

And, yeah, when I was in school we read Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes and Richard Wright and Mildred D. Taylor and Rosa Guy and Lorraine Hasberry and Maya Angelou and other non-white, non-black authors like Amy Tan and Julia Alvarez.

She's definitely very light skinned.
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I bet she's just mad her parents named her Dhonielle (which she says is pronounced like 'Don' or 'Dawn'...they couldn't even call her something with one pronunciation!)

And, yeah, when I was in school we read Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes and Richard Wright and Mildred D. Taylor and Rosa Guy and Lorraine Hasberry and Maya Angelou and other non-white, non-black authors like Amy Tan and Julia Alvarez.

She's definitely very light skinned.
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She's gotta be at least half white and is yet again overcompensating for it just like a dozen other rando SJWs
 
I really wonder how many of the people who form Twitter hate mobs screaming about how racist and culturally appropriative books where the entire message is criticizing racism are end up buying the books anyway, or never planned to buy them to begin with and only ever heard of them because shrill harpies like Dhonielle start sperging out over them.

Being anti-Racist is now racist. I still can't get over that even though its been a few years since I've been introduced to this topsy-turvy idea.

Some argue anti-racist is codeword for anti-white, so anti-racism being racist is yet another thing which alt-right Nazis and SJWs agree on.
 
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