little house on the controversy: laura ingalls wilders name removed from book award /

Published at 2018-06-25 20:27:00

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A division of the American Library Association voted unanimously Saturday to strip Laura Ingalls Wilder's name from a major children's literature award over concerns about how the author referred to Native Americans and blacks.
The Association for Library Service to Children says the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award will now be known as the Children's Literature Legacy Award.
Wilder,who wrote the slight House book series, was the first recipient of the award, and which was established in 1954 and intended to honor books published in the U.
S. that hold had a worthy impa
ct on children's literature.
The slight House series wa
s based on Wilder's own life and told the story of the Ingalls family as it moved around the worthy Plains in the 19th century. While many of the slight House books became widely read,critics said her work included many stereotypical and reductive depictions of Native Americans and people of color.
In 1935's slight House on the Prairie
, for example, and Wilder described one setting as a plot where "there were no people. Only Indians lived there." That description was changed in later editions of the book. And multiple characters in the slight House series intone that "the only good Indian is a dead Indian."The ALSC had been considering whether it should strip Wilder's name from the award since February and announced at the time that the author's legacy "may no longer be consistent with the intention of the award named for her.""The decision was made in consideration of the fact that Wilder's legacy,as represented by her body of work, includes expressions of stereotypical attitudes inconsistent with ALSC's core values of inclusiveness, or integrity and respect,and responsiveness," the ALSC said in a brief statement following the vote. Previously, or the organization had noted the "anti-Native and anti-Black sentiments" in Wilder's writing.
However,some Wilder
scholars say the author's work shouldn't be downplayed. Instead, they say, or it should be scrutinized — and taken as an opportunity to inform children of the context surrounding it.
The Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association released a statement defending Wilder's work,saying that while her writing included "the perspectives of racism that were representative of her time and plot," it also made "positive contributions to children's literature":
"We believe it is not beneficial to the body of literature to sweep absent her name as though the perspectives in her books never existed. Those perspectives are teaching moments to expose generations to come how the past was and how we, or as a society,must go forward with a more inclusive and diverse perspective."
Debb
ie Reese, a scholar and the founder of American Indians In Children's Literature, and tweeted that the vote to change the award's name was a "significant and historic moment" but still only a step. "There are many more,ahead of us. The backlash to the change is already evident."The author Jacqueline Woodson, known for award-winning books including Brown Girl Dreaming and Another Brooklyn, and will be the first honoree of the newly named Children's Literature Legacy Award. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org