http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/25/AR2010062504125_pf.html



Black writers in a ghetto of the publishing industry's making
By Bernice L. McFadden
Saturday, June 26, 2010; A15 
Kathryn Stockett's novel "The Help," published by a Penguin Books imprint, sold 
1 million books within a year of publication. Her novel has gained accolades 
and awards, including the prestigious South African Boeke Prize. "The Help" is 
being adapted for the screen; at the helm of production is the Academy 
Award-winning director and producer Steven Spielberg. 
Sue Monk Kidd's best-selling novel "The Secret Life of Bees," also published by 
Penguin Books, is another story set in the South with African American 
characters. Kidd's novel garnered similar fame, fortune and recognition. 
Kathryn Stockett and Sue Monk Kidd are living the dream of thousands of 
authors, myself included. But they are not the first white women to pen stories 
of the black American South and be lauded for their efforts. In 1928, Julia 
Peterkin wrote a novel, "Scarlet Sister Mary," for which she received the 
Pulitzer Prize in fiction. Stockett's and Kidd's novels tackle racism and 
celebrate the power of friendship and acceptance. Both novels were given 
beautiful covers that did not reveal the race of the characters. Both books 
were marketed to black and white audiences. 
My debut novel, "Sugar," was also published by a Penguin imprint. Set in the 
1950s South, the story line deals with racism and celebrates the power of 
friendship and acceptance. The original cover depicted a beautiful black woman 
standing behind a screen door. "Sugar" was marketed solely to African American 
readers. This type of marginalization has come to be known among African 
American writers as "seg-book-gation." This practice is not only demeaning but 
also financially crippling. When I looked into why works by African American 
writers were packaged and marketed so differently than those by their white 
counterparts, I did not have to search far for my answer. 
Literature about the oppressed written by the oppressor has a long tradition. 
The trend can be traced all the way to colonialism -- a movement that was not 
only physical but textual, the evidence of which can be found in the diaries, 
letters and journals of colonists, settlers and plantation slave owners. 
Representation of African Americans by white people in texts records a history 
of "inferiority." Based on these perceptions, African Americans have endured 
slavery, genocide, medical apartheid and segregation. 
This "inferiority" is a tool fundamental to ethnic distancing in society. 
Today, this tool is used with great precision in the mainstream publishing 
industry. While, yes, the distancing may not be total -- meaning a few select 
African American authors have "crossed over" into the mainstream -- the work of 
many African Americans authors, myself included, has been lumped into one heap 
known as "African American literature." This suggests that our literature is 
singular and anomalous, not universal. It is as if we American authors who 
happen to be of African descent are not a people but a genre much like mystery, 
romance or thriller. 
Walk through your local chain bookstore and you will not see sections tagged 
British Literature, White American Literature, Korean Literature, Pakistani 
Literature and so on. None of these ethnicities are singled out or objectified 
the way African American writers are. 
And while, yes, a vast majority of all writers, regardless of skin color, are 
struggling to stay afloat, and there are more African American writers being 
published today than at any other time in history, one must still take note of 
exactly what is being published. 
Mainstream publishing houses contort themselves to acquire books that glorify 
wanton sex, drugs and crime. This fiction, known as street-lit or hip-hop 
fiction, most often reinforces the stereotypical trademarks African Americans 
have fought hard to overcome. And while we are all the descendants of those 
great literary pioneers who first gave a voice to the African American 
experience, and one certainly could not exist without the other, somewhere down 
the line the balance was thrown off and the scales tipped in favor of a genre 
that glorifies street life and denigrates a cultural institution that took 
hundreds of years to construct. 
This year is arguably the 90th anniversary of the birth of the Harlem 
Renaissance. It is also the 50th anniversary of the death of Zora Neale 
Hurston, one of the most iconic figures of the Renaissance. In 1950 Hurston 
addressed this very problem in her essay "What White Publishers Won't Print," 
which was published in the Negro Digest. 
"For various reasons, the average, struggling, non-morbid Negro is the 
best-kept secret in America. His revelation to the public is the thing needed 
to do away with that feeling of difference which inspires fear, and which ever 
expresses itself in dislike." 
Her words still ring true. 
Bernice L. McFadden is the author of seven novels. Her most recent book, 
"Glorious," was published in May. 
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