So instead of starting off with what's wrong, let me begin with what's right. When talking about diverse anthologies and submission guidelines, here are some books that fit the bill:
Long Hidden: Speculative Fiction from the Margins of History edited by Rose Fox & Daniel Jose Older | Submission Guidelines
Diverse Energies edited by Tobias S. Buckell & Joe Monti
Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond edited by Bill Campbell and Edward Austin Hall | Submission Guidelines
THE SEA IS OURS: TALES OF STEAMPUNK SOUTHEAST ASIA edited by Jaymee Goh and Joyce Chng Submission Guidelines
Kaleidoscope: Diverse YA Science Fiction and Fantasy Stories edited by Alisa Krasnostein and Julia Rios | Submission Guidelines (disclosure: I work for Twelfth Planet Press)
With that aside, I want to point out two Guest of Honor speeches from the recently-concluded Wiscon 38. One from Hiromi Goto and another from N.K. Jemisin. Here's an excerpt:
"How important, then, that published stories come from diverse sources; from the voices, experiences, subjectivities and realities of many rather than from the imagination of dominant white culture. For even as we’ve been enriched and enlightened by tales from Western tradition, stories are also carriers and vectors for ideologies. And the white literary tradition has a long legacy of silencing, erasing, distorting and misinforming." - Hiromi Goto
"We’ve seen that bigotry directed not just toward black authors but authors of all races other than white; not just along the racial continuum but the axes of gender, sexual orientation, nationality, class, and so on. We’ve seen it aimed by publishers and book buyers and reviewers and con organizers toward readers, in the form of every whitewashed book cover, every “those people don’t matter” statement, and every all-white, mostly-male BookCon presenters’ slate." - N.K. JemisinI want to home in on a specific passage from Jemisin's speech:
"A SFWA affiliate member posted a call for civility on his website; in the process he called me “an Omarosa” and a “drama queen”, but of course he didn’t mean those in a racialized or gendered way... And let me emphasize that I am by no means the only woman or person of color who’s been targeted by threats, slurs, and the intentional effort to create a hostile environment in our most public spaces. People notice what happens to me because for better or worse I’ve achieved a high-enough profile to make the attacks more visible. But I suspect every person in this room who isn’t a straight white male has been on the receiving end of something like this — aggressions micro and macro. Concerted campaigns of “you don’t belong here”."On the very same day Jemisin made her speech, a call for submissions for an anthology titled World Encounters went up (you can find the screenshot from The Radish of the edited submission guidelines as of 2014/05/27), from the same editor who called Jemisin an "Omarosa" and "drama queen" (the original post has been deleted as of 2014/05/28).
Now there are two points I want to tackle: the submission guidelines itself, for the Formalists out there, and the editor. Why does the latter matter? Because as someone whose culture has been marginalized, to quote Hiromi Goto, I don't want to be part of "a long legacy of silencing, erasing, distorting and misinforming." And when you're a writer, your immediate gatekeeper is your editor. You want your editor to be someone informed, someone you can trust. Imagine, for example, if the editor of an LGBT anthology was Orson Scott Card. Wouldn't you, either as a writer or a reader, find that problematic?
Also, to clarify, I don't think there will be a "perfect" editor or anthology. There will always be something that people will complain about, or find problematic. But on the other, that's no excuse for cultural appropriation (especially from people of privilege), and it's easy to screw things up. Case in point, Wil Wheaton's non-apology when using the term "spirit animals," even when it's explained to him why it's wrong.
I. The Submission Guidelines
What if aliens landed on Earth right next door? How would your neighbors react? What about you? What if they landed all over the world? How would people of different cultures respond? What about Earth explorers encountering aliens on their own planets far from home?The premise is fine. It sounds generic, but nothing problematic yet.
Submissions outside these dates and parameters will be summarily rejected and cannot be resubmitted. I reserve the right to close submissions at any time if the slush pile is too big and I have what I need. No money is promised or contracts offered until the Kickstarter funds. No simultaneous submissions.
Also, people who are living or have lived in NonWestern cultures, especially the ones they write about, will absolutely have a leg up as authenticity is really important to me.
Here, there is an attempt to reach out to marginalized groups, although this would immediately be contradicted by the editor's succeeding paragraph (see below). Also, it assumes that:
- The authors will actually write about the culture they've interacted with ("especially the ones they write about") because there's always a possibility that I, a Filipino, might write about Japan, and what do I really know about Japan?
- That the authors will automatically be familiar and understand the culture, because the possibility that they are "cultural tourists" couldn't possibly happen, and
- As a reader, the authenticity that I care about is what's written on the page, not the author's biography; a knowledgeable person might not necessarily be able to adeptly convey their experiences for example.
Multi-award winner Mike Resnick will be writing a new Africa story for this, and there will be other headliners with reserved slots, including Kay Kenyon and Jack McDevitt, but I will be looking for 10-15 stories from the open call.
Wait, wait, a privileged Western white writer writing about Africa? This hasn't been done before!
And Mike Resnick has written about Africa before. He must get it right, right?
In many ways, the editor's oversight of this fact is part of a larger, arguably unconscious, racism on his part. Take for example his blog entry titled Broadening The Toolbox Through Cross Cultural Encounters: On Resnick, Africa & Opportunity. Instead of talking about writers from the continent of Africa (and it's a large continent, so there's a large pool of writers like Chinua Achebe, Lauren Beukes, and Joan De La Haye), we get Mike Resnick. Nnedi Okorafor gets mentioned but only as an off-hand comment, rather than the focus of the article.
So when talking about an anthology that's diverse and inclusive, neither Mike Resnick, Kay Kenyon, or Jack McDevitt are what I'd consider the examples you should be touting as a contributors. Because to many, it appears that you are favoring the already privileged writers instead of those marginalized.
I won't even comment that an author that was touted in the original version was eventually rescinded in the edited version, after it was brought up to the said author's attention.
The goal is to have stories by a few known and upcoming Western writers but also include some up and coming foreign natives writing from their own cultural view as well to give exposure to SF from outside the Western world as long as it matches the theme. I will be limiting the number of Western writers included to be sure we get those outside voices.Words matter. Here, we have a contradictory paragraph. On one hand, it claims that it wants to give "foreign natives" a chance. First off, you don't call writers of other cultures foreign natives. It's foreign to you and they are natives to you (when was the last time people referred to themselves as natives?). It already tips the editor's hand that the book is from a Western paradigm. On the other hand, it's also the Western writers that seem prioritized here. I mean that's why we have guaranteed authors like Mike Resnick, Kay Kenyon, and Jack McDevitt (none of which are, ahem, "foreign natives").
Stories can be Past, Future, Present, on Earth or off, let your imagination run. But I don’t want a bunch of alien POV stories.
I’d like varied POV from different cultures, so I want 1 or 2 from alien POV but not half the anthology or a third. I want some set on Earth and some off. Some could be on starships, too. But I don’t want all. So if you are setting them on Earth and if you are using American POV or Alien POV, please let me know so I can encourage balance.
I would accept a really good story longer than 7 k, but contact me and it will be under much more scrutiny. 3-5k is my sweet spot, honestly. 5-7 is okay but, again, not ideal because I have so many great people wanting in and I’d love to have as many stories, authors and cultures represented as possible. Of course I will take the best stories. If it works out at 12 instead of 20, so be it. But I’m just telling you what I’m shooting for.
This is just horrible writing. This can be summed up "I want X, but not too much of X, or too little of X." That's not to say you won't be making these decisions as an editor, but it's usually made after you've received all the submissions, not before.
I want this to reach a broad audience, including education uses, so if you use foul language, humorous setting is going to be easier sell than serious and if you drop more than two F-bombs in a story, you are lessening your chances. Same goes for “goddammits,” “shit,” “asshole,””mf,” and you get the picture. I am not trying to be a prude or force my beliefs on you. I just want to balance an audience because people need to learn about cultures and perspectives and that has educational value. To quote the description at the top: “we’d like this to be a collection parents and kids can read and discuss to learn and encourage interest in SF and other cultures.”
This means I also don’t want political stories. No bashing other people groups, cultures or belief systems/parties. This is not to be divisive but uniting, because my experience has taught me there are a lot of other viewpoints in the world we Westerners can learn from, but hearing them won’t happen if we turn people away.
First, all stories are political. In fact, the paragraph banning "goddammits," "shit," "asshole," etc. is a political decision. When someone says they're not political, what they really mean is that their politics belongs to the status quo, and they don't want to challenge that. One example is Nintendo's recent statement regarding same-sex marriage in a their video game, Tomodachi Life:
“Nintendo never intended to make any form of social commentary with the launch of ‘Tomodachi Life,”
What they really mean by "no social commentary" is "we are against homosexual partnerships."
Second, we go back to the dominance of the Western paradigm in the anthology. That's why words like "we Westerners" are used. What is the point of soliciting stories from Non-Western writers, if inevitably, their stories will be Westernized to cater to a a perceived Western audience?
I love action but I’d also like a bit of levity so humor is good. I don’t want all humor. And I don’t want all action but I do need some of both. (How’s that for being specific.) That being said, sex and graphic violence also should be kept out. Pretty obvious. Enough said. Smatterings of foreign words for flavor are fine, but we should be able to interpret it in context. You can play with (translations in parenthesis too) but too much of that just increases word count and makes it harder to read.Again, more bad writing (I want X, but not too much...). With the bolded part, the editor betrays their lack of understanding of other cultures and the craft of writing.
First, for great writers, foreign words are included in the text not necessarily because they're flavor, but because they're essential to the story. Second, if an author chooses (or does not choose to) translate a word and place it in parenthesis, there's a reason for it, and it's not due to extending the word count. Third, if it's harder to read, that's because the author doesn't condescend to the reader.
As I am expecting an Africa story from Mike Resnick, seek authenticity. He’s famous for his Africa stories and I have no doubt whatever he does will be brilliant. After all, he’s got Nebula and Hugo nominations and awards for these stories. Which means, if you write Africa, expect to be compared.First, writers are only as good as the work they submit. No competent editor would blindly accept a story that hasn't been written yet. Because it could be crap, and that's regardless of your politics.
Second, some would argue Resnick's stories are inauthentic. And it doesn't also mean that another writer, say one hailing from South Africa, will write an inferior South African story.
This editor has been to Africa, Mexico and Brazil and studied the cultures, countries and religions extensively, for example, so please research any culture you choose. Do not write what you think they are. Do not write stereotypes.Africa is a continent. Mexico and Brazil are countries. To equate the two is an inability to understand their cultural nuance, especially from someone who proclaims they have studied the culture, countries, and religions extensively.
I am inviting a few Western writers whom I know have traveled and have strong cultural knowledge, sensitivity and passion for places they visited.
Translation: because despite my previous claims that this anthology is for writers outside of the Western world, this is really for my Western writer friends (because we don't have enough of those!).
Not every Mexican is the same, for example, but please have it so your Mexicans are real enough my actual Mexican friends would tell me you got it right. (I do have friends around the world who will read for cultural authenticity before I make final selections, so I want authentic.)
Here we have a contradiction. On one hand, the editor is making a claim that Mexicans are diverse. On the other hand, he also wants a Mexican archetype that will ring true to every Mexican (or at least his friends, because his friends represents Mexico). Which is faulty because you can't please everyone in a culture, because that's the definition of diversity. I can write about my own Filipino experience, and it might ring true to some Filipinos, but will sound faulty for others.
Also, it seems the barometer for cultural expertise is "they are my friends from around the world," which honestly isn't very methodical.
Here's a Bingo card from The Angry Black Woman:
What are the odd little cultural quirks people exhibit which would strike outsiders as odd but insiders as perfectly normal? Use those in your story for humor, confusion, etc.Yes, because we should pander to our Western audience. And not because cultural quirks are essential to the story.
Must be willing to respect the editor’s editing requests. No assholes allowed. Seriously. Also, if you have slandered my name or resent me for not sharing your views, don’t bother. I guarantee I won’t.To borrow an image from The Radish:
I guess the editor can slander and resent other people, but not the other way around.
II. The Editor
So Thomas Bryan Schmidt claims that "[he] has not said or done anything racist or sexist in his entire life" (source). Despite in the same blog post, he labels N.K. Jemisin as an Omarosa. Or, you know, his history of name calling, whether it's due to a person's gender or race.
Look, full disclosure. I've said lots of racist and sexist things in my life. I've screwed up, horribly. So I wouldn't make any attempt to claim that I'm not racist or sexist. But I'm willing to tackle, to change, and to correct myself. I don't always succeed.
Bryan Thomas Schmidt isn't that person. He has two main problems:
1. He never blames his own writing for conveying the wrong message. For example: "I should apologize to them that THEY misconstrued and misinterpreted my words?" Or statements like this:
Regardless of your politics, that's just a bad policy for someone whose profession is writing and editing. People don't need to know you. They can only read the words you use.
2. When people try to explain, educate, or address his points, he ignores them. If he hasn't heard of you, you get banned. If he has and you're famous, he'll try to placate you.
Disregard, disregard, disregard, ban.
III. My Experience
As far back as 2012, I witnessed an exchange between Bryan Thomas Schmidt and a friend. The former had an ambiguously-worded tweet that could be interpreted as defending Save the Pearls. Bryan then wrote a blog post condemning my friend. I replied, in private and politely, why I thought his blog post was wrong, and informed him that I would be posting a rebuttal on my blog. He then took down the post, called me a bully, and banned/blocked me.
I told this and showed the transcripts to an author/editor friend of mine, and he told me neither he nor his wife would support bullies. So back in 2012, I shut up.
Maybe posting this account makes me a bully. But by not speaking out back then, it's paving the way for injustice. In 2013, Bryan posted about #SFFCivility. In 2014, it's the Submission Guidelines mentioned above. Because I have no doubt, some people will submit.
And it goes beyond those projects.
I love SF Signal. I was a contributor. I stopped contributing after 2012. It's not because Bryan Thomas Schmidt was also a contributor to the site, but that fact wasn't encouraging either. I don't know how the current members of SF Signal feel about him. [2014/05/30 Edit: He was no longer a contributor to SF Signal since the last quarter of 2013.]
Adventures in Sci-Fi Publishing produced interesting podcasts before 2012. After that year? I wouldn't know. I stopped listening by then. Bryan Thomas Schmidt was a sponsor of the show, and guested a few times.
#sffwrtcht is also run by Bryan Thomas Schmidt. It's been consistent and a valuable venue for authors or publishers looking for some publicity. Bryan claims that it's inclusive, but how can it be inclusive when the owner calls people names like rotting meat, deletes tweets/comments/posts, and immediately bans people unless they're famous? So yeah, it's not a venue for me. [2014/05/30 Edit: The hashtag was apparently appropriated by Bryan from a female creative and was never acknowledged.]
I refuse to believe that people are that oblivious of how racially charged their words can be. And the evidence lies in the fact, I'd posit, that he pulled his Omarosa post. Really? Why not stand by it? And of he realized it was wrong, why not say so?
ReplyDeleteThat anthology call out is disgusting. And I mean really horrid. My 12 year old would have done better than that! Freaking ridiculous. The editor needs and editor.
I don't think you're a bully. You perceived a problem, and you've clearly laid out why you believe this is a problem. You're making choices to not support, with time or finances, projects you don't believe in. That's what I want to see when people are making a stand. You're not simply being louder or more insulting or too vague to be pinned down.
ReplyDeleteThank you for that.
I have the same problems with him/his work. I've also chosen to avoid his projects, social media, chats. He's free to speak his mind, to create and staff projects, and I'm not going to try to stop him, but I do think other people have a right to discourse about those projects.
I've made mistakes, too. Everyone does. I'd hope I'd be a lot more open to the discussion of those mistakes when it's pointed out to me, and if BTS's reaction had been "I'll consider your concerns" or "I've thought about it and here's why I disagree", I doubt he'd be getting the blowback he's so angry about now.
*claps* Pretty much said everything I was going to say in my post, so I may not post it now :P
ReplyDeleteGood points all around.
He banned me from his blog last year, when I simply pointed out some problematic phrases in his posts and recommended he read Jemisin's speech. He's completely tone deaf and paternalistic. And ghod help you if you disagree with him.
ReplyDeleteI felt that I had to say something as well, as I was getting questions about a post on his blog about Streets of Shadows.
ReplyDeleteShort form: He quit Streets of Shadows because I insisted on following my Kickstarter policies and guidelines. The ones that Writer Beware praised.
Ah well. I'm proud to be a founding member of Team Rotten Meat as well. :)
Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry you and your friends had to go through this.
ReplyDeleteThere is one (may be minor) point though, that I disagree with you about - I am actually happy that people like Jack McDevitt, and I would add Tobias Buckell, Ken McLeod, Lavie Tidhar, and Ian McDonald write about Africa or Oceania or Greece or Turkey or Brazyl or Eastern Europe. I look at them as the success stories - the priviliged Westerners that actually looked out of the box and got interested enough in distant cultures to study them, and to write about them. I appreciate their efforts, if they don't get everything right.
Anon -- point of fact, Tobias Buckell is Caribbean, born and raised (I forget what country exactly, my apologies for that) and moved to the US as an adult. He might be a privileged Westerner right now, but he didn't grow up that way, and he still identifies as Caribbean.
ReplyDeleteAngie
Buckell is bi-racial and grew up in and around Grenada during the U.S. invasion. When he writes about Caribbean cultures and colonialism, he's not starting from "out of the box."
ReplyDeleteAs pointed out, Tobias Buckell grew up in Grenada. I wouldn't consider Lavie Tidhar a privileged Westerner either.
ReplyDeleteAnd the bigger problem of that statement is that we always draw attention to privileged Western writers. When was the last time people were aware of successful, marginalized writers?
I didn't know where Buckell was born, sorry. I am from Eastern Europe, Bulgaria, to me Israel is a bona fide Western country. They even play in the UEFA tournaments. :)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, my point is that these guys are our natural allies because they do ground work getting the readers interested in the strange and the unknown. Hopefully, this will help to make the average reader interested even in someone from a marginalized culture.
I met Bryan at WorldCon last year and he was very nice to me. So I am more than a little shocked that he is the author of the "Omarosa" and "drama queen" comments against NK Jemisin. Not just because she is a friend of mine, but because given the context that is pretty darn racist. Thank you for this post. It's given me a lot to think about. Not every one that is "nice" is nice.
ReplyDeleteThis is great, Charles. Not bullyish at all. I'm fairly certain I contributed to BTS's growing defensiveness, and I'm honesty happy about it. I'd rather know somebody for who they are when challenged on their bs than continue thinking they're just "nice." Nice is not really nice unless it continues, humbly, when that person is confronted by so, so many people. He can't manage to have that humility and continues to blame others. Call it out, I say. Really well done on your part. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteJemisin is a racist and Resnick has been put on the black list by the so called tolerant ones for saying the word lady. Also he's been attacked for doing stories of the continent he loves(Africa) because of his skin color(that so called privileged skin)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, Where is my privilege? it's always another of the 100 million white males that seem to get it(and it seems like most of them feel the same way)
Privilege is Exclusive guys, time to wake up to the fact that 99% and 1% are different because of the rarity of the club(the 1% is the Minority of Minorities and always have been)
Majority and Exclusivity is not the same thing.
Censorship is the first refuge of the Coward!
It would take another lengthy blog post to debunk the latest anonymous comment.
ReplyDeleteI already wrote the post about why I will CURRENTLY not work with Mike Resnick... and the single and sole condition needed to change that.
ReplyDeletehttp://ideatrash.net/2014/02/an-open-letter-to-mike-resnick-on.html
And I must disagree: The first refuge of the coward is anonymity.
Jemisin is a racist and Resnick has been put on the black list
ReplyDeleteNothing to see here, folks--how dare you suggest that racism may systemically permeate Western thought and language!
Also he's been attacked for doing stories of the continent he loves(Africa)
Ah, the continent he loves. How many of us can truly say we have the knowledge and intimacy of an entire continent to truly know love for it? Truly, he is blessed among men.
Privilege is Exclusive guys, time to wake up to the fact that 99% and 1% are different because of the rarity of the club
Ah, yes, class trumps race and sex. An old chestnut, but apparently still ripe for some people.
Thank you for sharing both your excellent and insightful analysis, and also your experiences.
ReplyDeleteI don't believe you are bullying at all Charles, not here in this post nor in your behavior previously.
ReplyDeleteI think you are reasonably even handed in your criticism, but then it doesn't take much to upset people, especially those that aren't used to being challenged on their thinking.
Long story short: Schmidt's thought process appears assumption-ridden and sloppy; as a result, he will make a very poor editor for the anthology content he proposes.
ReplyDelete