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[personal profile] renay posting in [community profile] ladybusiness
Ah, the familiar tones of the gender debate coming again from SF fandom. Recently, I wrote about the cultural pressure to read white men. In the midst of this, two white men were proving my point about how this cycle continues. They're rolling in dollars so they probably don't care much that they've done so. Money must be so freeing.

Then Liz Bourke burst onto the scene with Conversations Founded On False Assumptions. It's insightful and notes how the conversation keeps being turned to "where are the women writers?" when they've been here the whole time. This goes back to that cultural pressure to read men I mentioned which can come in the form of other fans, aggressive marketing, inequality in publicity, and as always, the problematic construction of a thing the Internet loves: a rec list.

The comments on Liz's article are predictable in their content. The general gist is "I don't make reading decisions based on gender! ONLY THE WORDS MATTER." They don't see gender. They don't see race, either! They don't see anything but the purity of the written word, pressed into pages by a wholly unbiased, diverse, and uncomplicated publishing industry/self-publication machine!

We've reached a point where book lists, whether they're recommendation lists, best of lists, upcoming lists, or even themed lists, should not be 100% white men. If a list has more than 70% white men on it that list is dubious no matter who it's from. If there's a list of recommendations without at least 30% women or people of color, seek other tastemakers immediately. Even lists of all women should be carefully examined because it's probably going to have terrible racial intersections.

Some would love to cling to a simple world in which systemic issues don't influence their choices, where they're immune to marketing, and quality rises to the top for them to partake of guilt-free. The best we can do is be patient and forgiving, casually slip recs for books by women and POC into conversations, and maybe they'll come around. However, there are people out there who, emerging from this stage of denial as beautiful, impressionable butterflies, may want to know more if they haven't been hammered by, well, people like me beating the drum of the benefits of reading widely (I'm trying to be Less Intense these days; it's a work in progress). So here are five ways I used to start reading more diverse writers in the not so distant past.

The Quota Conundrum


I used to be this person, bleating about quotas. The temptation to use quotas to push back against movements to read diversely is understandable. For example, I imagine how the reading conversation might feel like to a person new to the game as if it were someone telling me for every book by a woman I wanted try I had to read an entire Piers Anthony novel whether I liked it or not.

That helps with the compassion, you see. What a nightmare scenario.

I solved this issue by starting small. I didn't change my reading habits at all. Instead, for every white man I added to my reading list I also added a woman or person of color. This expanded the options I could look at when choosing my next book. I used Amazon for this back then, and their algorithm was always shoving recs at me, so it wasn't too difficult to find another book to add by scrolling through the options. Any reading service or book retailer would work for this. Then, when shopping or at the library, out comes the list full of a wide array of different authors! Profit!

Twitter: Recommendation Engine


There are tons of book bloggers out there pushing out their reviews and favorite lists already on Twitter. However, many book bloggers tend to skew white and male unless you're following a blog by a woman or non-binary writer (some men who blog about books have gotten better so be sure to check archives). If you're already following specific book blogs and know you and the reviewers have the same taste, all the better. If you're like me, shy and nervous about asking for recs, hang out on hashtags like #FridayReads, #WeNeedDiverseBooks, or #bookrecs.

Best Of Lists


Large Hearted Boy collects these every year; here's the 2014 version. There are hundreds of recommendation lists in all types of categories and genres. Go through the lists, note the books that sound interesting by diverse writers, write 'em down or save them to your reading service of choice.

I've also become fond of the lists on Goodreads in the past few years as the site continues to grow. This gets a little hairy because depending on the genre you're in, white dudes can dominate. Look past the first twenty books/the first page of selections.

Reading Challenges


Once you have a collection of books, you can start reading. But how not to fall into the same bad habits? I used reading challenges. The latest one is the Bradford Challenge, launched by K. Tempest Bradford earlier this year. Hers is great because it's intersectional, but doesn't require you to drop men completely if that's the demographic and perspective you're most comfortable reading. It's absolutely possible to focus on men of color, queer men, and trans men. This could be a great first step to add some diversity.

You can roll your own challenge, too. For every white author read a person of color. For every two books by a man read a woman. If you read multiple genres, choose one genre to be full of diverse authors for a year. Read nothing but women/POC/queer authors for six months. Do a library challenge of reading diverse authors from the shelves for three months. The possibilities are endless.

Listen


It's a noisy world out there. There's a lot of media vying for our attention and taking the time required to break out of the homogenous cycle that we all inevitably get trapped in takes effort and energy. When I first noticed my reading stats, I am pretty sure my numbers were like 45/1 in favor of men. Forget about race; I was 100% White People. First, I was mad about it. Then it was embarrassing. Every time I saw someone say something about it online I felt uncomfortable and defensive. I wanted to take their words and stomp them hard, light them on fire, and also probably launch the ashes into the sun. No one likes feeling humiliated or left out or defensive.

The bonus of not doing that to people pointing our measurable biases within certain areas of publishing is that the Internet can be safe for improving the perspectives we listen to and experience. Self-improvement can be done quietly, privately, and no one needs to know what's going on unless they're told. I highly recommend it from personal experience. And listening has a benefit, too, because when listening, this can result in more recommendations, more context, and understanding in whatever genres you read in more deeply. It's a win/win. Listening is how you learn.

Obligatory Disclaimer


Perhaps you feel like you have all the knowledge inside of you and understand the complexity of people and the world! But it's a lie. No one knows the whole of human experience, especially since so many perspectives have been ground into the dirt, devalued, and erased. Compassion and empathy are fostered by the stories built by people, whether fictional or not. Representation in both who tells the stories and who the stories are about matters.

Be real with yourself the next time you're tempted to tell someone you don't "see" gender or race when diversity of lists, reading more diverse books, or conversations about diverse writers comes up. Ask yourself who it benefits to make that argument to someone who you will not convince (we've heard it 10,000 times; we're over it). It's okay not to want to read anything but people who mirror your life experience as long as you own it for what it is. But don't pretend some sort of illusionary moral high ground via the erasure of lived experience and diverse voices sold to you by systems that benefit from your continued investment in the lie of cultural equality. It doesn't exist, friends, and until you see the systems you're perpetuating, you will only continue participating in them as a tool.

Good luck out there.

Date: 2015-07-24 07:18 pm (UTC)
adraekh: (Default)
From: [personal profile] adraekh
Thank you! My Goodreads to-read list has now exploded, thanks to all the wonderful recs. :)

> And if we extend to the Indian subcontinent I can think of a fair few...

Feel free, if it's not too much trouble! Most of the Indian authors I've read are either fiction or non-fiction, none in SFF that I can recall.

Date: 2015-07-25 03:10 pm (UTC)
aliettedb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] aliettedb
Off the top of my head: Indra Das (The Devourers forthcoming from Penguin in 2016 I think? and a lot of short fiction published under Indrapramit Das), Vandana Singh (The Woman who Thought she was a Planet and Other Stories), Anil Menon (The Beast with Nine Billion Feet), Samit Basu (Gameworld trilogy which starts with the Simoqin Prophecies and is available on Kindle), Usman Malik (lots of short fiction), Kuzhali Manickavel, Vajra Chandrasekera. I'm sure there's a lot more (and a lot of it, as with the other places in Asia, isn't published and marketed as genre specifically but has a lot of genre elements? Definitions are... different there, if it makes sense?).

You can also check out Lavie Tidhar's Book of World SF series which has a lot of short fiction (it focuses on authors outside the Anglophone world, and there's a fair bit of Asians in there).

Date: 2015-07-25 03:13 pm (UTC)
aliettedb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] aliettedb
Oh, and this is a bit odd but it's wonderful (at least what I've read so far):
http://www.amazon.com/Fabulous-Feminist-Suniti-Namjoshi-Reader/dp/9381017336/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1437837115&sr=1-6&keywords=zubaan+books
It's a series of fables with genre elements, by turns wise and witty and funny.

ETA: And it was published as mainstream here, but Taichi Yamada's "Strangers"?
(sorry, I keep remembering stuff right after I post ^^)
Edited Date: 2015-07-25 03:15 pm (UTC)
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