Blind Eyes on the Prizes
I think that the focus on prizes skews the discussion from
what is to what gets rewarded. The books
are written the same with or without any award, awards are simply, in my honest
opinion most useful as marketing devices. The sales of books that win any youth
literature awards are all but guaranteed to skyrocket sometimes exponentially
after they are recognized or “win” the award(s).
Some books are chosen
by the Newberry committee that is so carefully described by Bonnie J.F. Miller
in her Fall 1998 article “What Color is Gold?. The books that win the famous
Newberry award or win Newberry Honors, certainly give evidence to how the award
is used and tremendously successful at selling those books.
The critique by Marc Aronson in his article “Slippery Slopes
and Proliferating Prizes” is fascinating in its approach to defining some
awards as “limited by” the award committee’s identity. MY response is that I agree with Miller’s
point that “literature is subjective” and that awards are, as she quotes Joan
Lyon Atkinson, “chosen by imperfect human beings who are of a particular time and
place; they reflect the values and priorities of their eras and backgrounds.”
(Miller, 1998)
I think we should add more awards for every category whether
it be quality in a genre or more awards for more specific identities to
increase the knowledge and understanding of all identities racial or otherwise.
There is simply no way to take the human aspect and the
identity aspect out of a single person much less a whole committee of people,
so why be upset at the human condition, and humanity in general, when we can
work with each other. Identity is always a factor as long as we hold on to, and
are attached to those identities, we will have to distinguish literature based
on those identities, especially ethnicities or other identities who are treated
as maligned and marginalized minorities whose youth literature could otherwise
be ignored entirely or worse. If we do not distinguish literature, it can be
and I think will be lost to our library users.
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