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From
Splice Today:
Novelist Joyce Carol Oates has a complaint about the current
literary world that she recently voiced on Twitter: “hard to write
honestly about racism in America now since, if you are a fiction writer,
& need to reproduce the speech of racists, this speech-—crude,
cruel, revealing-—has to be softened or censored altogether. Ironically,
taboos of ‘political correctness’ protect racists.”
Her twitter account indicates that she’s a
proponent of the identity politics and performative wokeness favored by
the regressive Left these days, so it’s interesting, as well as
disturbing, that she’s grousing like this. Just imagine how writers who
don’t buy into the current “liberal” (which now often means “illiberal”)
agenda and bizarre rules of intersectionality feel about having to walk
on eggshells so they don’t upset a few cranks on Twitter who their
publishers are afraid of.
The prolific novelist’s plaintive tweet
indirectly highlights how many authors have quietly succumbed to the new
need to cater to the modern reader’s sensitivity. Thousands are now
self-censoring, or they’re meekly giving in after their editor tells
them their work contains microaggressions. The situation’s so bad that
many writers and publishers are hiring people in a new job category: the
“sensitivity reader.”
For a small fee, the sensitivity reader will
vet your manuscript for indications of a white savior complex, improper
physical descriptions of minorities, sexism, ableism, Islamophobia, and
just about every variation of accidental bias you could imagine. You
learn about what’s potentially “problematic” to your readers, who have
newfound powers. These sensitivity readers come in all varieties: black
Muslims, mixed-race females, Chinese-Americans, you name it. You may
need three or four of them just for one book. It’s depressing that a
professional novelist thinks it’s necessary to have someone scour their
work for “harmful tropes,” but outrage culture has raised the stakes.
Take the case of a poet named Anders Carlson-Wee who excitedly tweeted
about his poem, “How-To,” when The Nation published
it, only to be quickly forced to apologize after he was charged with
ableism for writing about a “crippled” person and brought to task for
writing in “African-American Vernacular English” (AAVE)—”Don’t say
homeless, they know you is.” Carlson-Wee’s white, which makes this
“problematic.”
The poem was good enough to make it into The Nation.
It’s about how people who give money to homeless people on the street
are really doing it for selfish reasons. It ends: “It’s about who they
believe they is. You hardly even there.” The Nation felt the need
to publish a wordy, scurry-for-the-exits apology that read like
something out of a re-education camp, when the proper response would’ve
been to publish the best of the reader complaints. A publication has no
responsibility for how the work it publishes is received. If this kind
of risk-averse thinking catches on, we’ll soon be reading only
anodyne, homogeneous dreck. Neither of the two poetry editors who
greenlighted “How-To” are black or disabled, so by the new rules of
engagement they were in no position to stand up for their writer. They
threw him under the bus instead, to save themselves.
“Ableist language”? A poem or work of
literature isn’t a display of virtue. The poet took on the voice of a
street person. Are we now living in a world where we’re supposed to
believe that a guy living on the street would say “disabled” instead of
“crippled,” or a white writer cannot write in black dialect? That would
mean that one of the nation’s greatest living novelists, Richard Price,
wouldn’t have been allowed to write Clockers (1992), because many NYC crack dealers sure did speak what’s now called AAVE when he wrote about them. (Read more.)
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1 comment:
Get real people! The world, culture, life, history, whatever, is what it is. A writer cannot sanitize it and at the same time convey the reality of which he/she is writing.
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