netmouse: Firefly, natch. (Big Damn Heroes)
netmouse ([personal profile] netmouse) wrote2010-05-27 07:44 pm

New post about the African-American fiction section in bookstores

I was interested to read N.K. Jemisin's recent post, Don’t Put My Book in the African American Section, which she wrote in reaction to word from a fan that her debut fantasy novel The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms has appeared in the African American section of her library.

This follows on a post by Alaya Dawn Johnson in March about how the recent paperback edition of her book Racing the Dark is being marketed to that section in Borders bookstores instead of the SF/Fantasy section.

It brings to mind a 2006 NY Times article by Nick Chiles, Their Eyes Were Reading Smut that I came across last year when I was processing my own horror about what composed the African American section (which I went to partly because I was participating in the 50 Books POC reading project and was seeking literature by African American writers). Basically, as Nora goes into in her post, those sections tend to be largely really trashy romance novels, incongruously set side-by-side with some of the best literature in the world. Including some top-notch SF that should really be shelved with the _rest_ of the science fiction and fantasy.

I would like to encourage fellow SF fans to visit African-American lit sections in your libraries and bookstores, and then to share comments with those places about the preferences of these authors (and you, if you concur) for where their books should be shelved.

While you're at it, you might consider picking up Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, after which Chiles took the title of his article. I read it last year and thought it was amazing. (And for those of you put off by such things, don't worry, it's mostly not about God. It is about very real-seeming people, and it's wonderfully written.) It will likely be in that section, and it makes more sense to put it there, since it is very much about the African-American experience.

Fantasy and science fiction set in completely different worlds or futures that happen to be by black authors or have dark-skinned characters on their covers? I agree with Nora - they should be shelved with the rest of the books in the genre.
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[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2010-05-28 10:30 am (UTC)(link)
Well, and for that matter, isn't trashy romance that features African-Americans just trashy romance...

I can't stand how big the Romance sections of bookstores have gotten in general, but I feel those books should at least be confined to those sections so that people who wish to avoid looking at them _can_.

On the section in general, I've read arguments both ways. It would be nice if bookstores that want an African-American section would dual-shelve those books, both in that section and in standard lit, or whatever. But they don't.

[identity profile] supergee.livejournal.com 2010-05-28 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
If I were an African-American fan of trashy romance, I would want the kind with characters I could idnetify with. I am old enough to remember when that option was not available.
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[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2010-05-28 03:02 pm (UTC)(link)
sure. And I'm very glad a variety exists in every genre now, and is increasing. But I don't have a problem identifying with African-American characters because I'm a white person, and exposure to more of that literature helps me identify more. Isolating that literature in a ghetto of the stores and libraries lowers the odds that I will see them and that I and other people like me will demonstrate to publishers that there *is* an audience and market for books with African-American characters amid a non-african-american reading population. Until they start shelving those books with the rest of the genre, they have a self-fulfilling prophecy that books with African-Americans on the cover will not sell as well as otherwise, because they don't market them as widely. So those books are harder to sell to publishers. So there are fewer of them published than should be (and many book covers are white-washed). If there weren't pressure to white-wash covers, and there weren't this story that books with black people on the covers can only be marketed to fellow black people, more would be published and African-Americans would have an easier time finding books with characters they can most easily identify with as well. But, I believe, in a much more healthy way and context.

[identity profile] supergee.livejournal.com 2010-05-28 04:49 pm (UTC)(link)
All I meant to say was that I'm glad that such books are now published. I am much less concerned with where the store puts them.
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[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2010-05-28 03:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Another thought: should you consider the hypothetical preferences of another version of yourself as being a stronger argument than the stated preferences of these real, active african-american authors?