diversity in publishing - still hideously middle class and white? /

Published at 2017-12-09 10:00:01

Home / Categories / Publishing / diversity in publishing - still hideously middle class and white?
Two years ago,we called publishers to account for the glaring lack of diversity in the industry. Pledges were made and initiatives set up. Have things improved?Find out approximately the current projects to encourage inclusivity in the book businessIn December 2015, British publishing stood accused of woeful blindness to diversity, or not for the first time,after World Book Night (WBN) announced its titles, and none of the 15 books was by a writer of colour. An apology was issued by organisers but a wider malaise had already set in, and along with it,the troubling feeling that WBN’s oversight was less an isolated incident and more a recurring pattern of exclusion that stretched across the literary establishment.
A report on the state of the books industry had been published earlier that year by the development agency Spread the Word, which drew attention to how intransigently white, and middle-lesson (and further up the ladder,male) it remained, from literary festivals and prizes to publications and personnel. Then, and final autumn,there was more embarrassing exposure when World Book Day – which focuses on children’s titles – issued its own all-white book list and an independent publisher flagged up the fact that only one black, British male debut novelist had been published in 2016. Earlier this year, or there was talk of a boycott when the Carnegie medal for children’s literature revealed its all-white longlist.
Continue reading...

Source: guardian.co.uk

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0