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YA Literature, Social Action, and Political Commentary?

8/26/2020

 
Last week's post by Ashley Boyd and Janine Darragh hit at exactly the right time for me. I was getting ready to start a new semester and was going to teach my two classes remotely. For us "remotely" means live, synchronous class meetings through a Zoom format. The fact that we are holding school at a university at all is both an act of politics and an act of capitalism. Universities need the tuition money in order to keep the doors open as they receive less and less of their funding from state resources and more and more from, grants, endowment, and other sources.

I think it is wrong when we pretend that we are neutral actors in the classroom. We are not. What we teach, who we call on, or who we allow to maintain the conversational floor are all micro, and perhaps in some cases, macro political acts.

My current YA syllabus (see link) is political and an attempt to be a more inclusive teacher of diverse books; books that more closely align with the students who are in my classroom. It has been engaging as I have spent a bulk of the summer intentionally reading more diverse books and expanding my range.

I have also spent the month of August look back at past contributions from guest contributors. I have been ignoring my own and, frankly, I tend to sing one note a bit too often.  However, for the rest of this post I am going to link to a few of my posts and the post of others that have been overtly political and perhaps with a call to action is one way or another. 

Past Post by Dr. Bickmore

The first post I look back to is a reaction I had to a statement by Secretary of State DeVos. 
A Diverse Reading List for Betsy DeVos
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I still think she is tone deaf to the needs of diverse students in every possible way. For example, school choice means nothing if students do not have the means to get themselves to get to that school. What if the school of choice is full? What about this attend to the supposed waste in education, but fully fund education. 

​I think the books I suggest are good starting point.
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My second post is my brief review of one of the most important works of YA nonfiction in the last several years.
Blood Brother: An introduction to Jonathan Daniels 
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I can't say enough about this beautiful and tragic work. Rich and Sandra Neil Wallace do a remarkable job of illustrating the power of being and ally and the reminder that it is not without a cost.
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I have written frequently about gun violence in a variety of ways. On June, 15, 2016 I wrote directly in response to the Pulse night club shooting.
Say His Name!
 I return frequently to some version of Janelle Monae's song "Hell You Talmbout."  This post and a few other moved me to collaborate with Shelly Shaffer and Gretchen Rumohr in the production of an edited, and yes, political book, Contending with Gun Violence in the English Language Arts Classroom. What you don't have it yet? Make sure your school library has a copy or two. As you explore this book you will find an abundance of great classroom suggestions.
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Posts by Other Contributors

Robert Prickett

Rob is a colleague that I just don't see often enough.  Every conversation I have had with him has left me already looking forward to the next one. In January of 2016, Rob responded to the current political climate and pointed to some YA books you might consider.
Ugh! The No More Political Talk Except for this Last Blog about YAL & Politics & Activism
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In the course of this commentary he provides a wealth of book--fiction and nonfiction that you might consider sharing with your students.
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Alice Hays

Alice Hays is another one of those wonderful ASU graduates who leave Tempe, Arizona and enacts change where she is.  Alice has been talking about YA literature  and Social Activism as long as I have known her. 
Fiction to Action: YA Literature to Inspire Social Activism by Dr. Alice Hays
Her post is a perfect companion to last week's post and fits in this group for sure.
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Jennifer Cameron Paulsen

If I am not mistaken, Jennifer is primarily a social studies teacher, but a huge advocate for YA Literature. She and I have guard many doorways at ALAN Workshops over the years. 
Imagining the Past & Envisioning the Present through Young Adult Literature
​She can surely provide you with a wealth of resources if you want to bridge the ELA and the SS classrooms and curricula. I will be forever grateful that she introduced me to Candace Fleming. 

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Gretchen Rumohr

How do we think critically about political events? How do we understand the media coverage--left, right, and center? How do we respond? Gretchen is one of most calming influences in my life, but that doesn't mean she isn't without an edge.
Teaching the Angry--or Peaceful--Mob with YA Literature by Gretchen Rumohr-Voskuil
Looking back at this post seem especially important since it was written before the current political wave of social unrest and protest and the political convention-or was this even the forerunner and foreshadowing moment of tensions and misunderstanding to come.
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Arianna Drossopoulos

I gave a shout out to the products from ASU, but I would be remiss if I didn't mention Susan Groenke and her students at the University of Tennessee. One of those is Arrianna. 
Books as Refuge: Turning to YAL During Times of Uncertainty by Arianna Drossopoulos
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This is another post that shouts out to be included in this collection.
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Ashley D. Black

Do we forget? Do we cover up? Do we just ignore and pretend? I recently meet a white woman in her 50s who grew up in Tulsa, OK. She explained to me that she knew absolutely nothing about the Tulsa Race Massacre (Riots?) until the Watchman series on HBO arrived. 
Dreamland Burning: A Charge to Make Sense of the Present by Interrogating Our Past by Ashley D. Black
Ashley post on Dreamland Burning is a great introduction to the even and how YA fiction addresses the time period. One might ask "Is it even possible to get an accurate, unbiased report of any unsettling event?" I hope so, but it probably takes more time and patience that we often allow ourselves before we spout an opinion.
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Deborah Van Duinen

In light of the anniversary of 100 years of women's suffrage in the United States, I can't skip this one. 
Herstory YA Literature to read together during Women's History Month by Deborah Van Duinen
I think we need to constantly remind ourselves about the level of inequity that still exists between men and women--in our work places, in the number of acts of micro aggression that a women will experience compared to men, and how much of the work within most families that women are simply expected to do automatically.
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Morgan Jackson

The last one for this post (There are more browse around the contributor's page.) is by Morgan Jackson a local Las Vegas teacher. I can't believe that it took us so long to meet. Morgan has jump right into the local and national YA community as soon has she was made aware of the existence of ALAN and other organizations.
YA Literature as Protest by Morgan Jackson
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Are you wondering where to start? Have all of these posts troubled how you think about literature and literature instruction in the classroom? If so, you are ready for Morgan's post. If you are still wondering and pondering if classrooms are political, well you need Morgan's post.
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Until next week.

Young Adult Literature as a Catalyst for Social Action by Ashley Boyd and Janine Darragh

8/19/2020

 
Many of us who work at universities in teacher preparation programs are wondering if we have been doing enough to promote social justice ideas. The recent events have, perhaps, caused us to think about the inequality of access to health care. The ongoing social unrest helpfully forces us to look inward at our own racist actions and beliefs. How can we do better? How can we be better? Two literacy educators who help me think about this work are Ashley Boyd and Janine Darragh. I am glad they offered to post for the blog.

Young Adult Literature as a Catalyst for Social Action

If you’re reading this blog post, most likely, you, like us, believe wholeheartedly in the potential of young adult literature to change lives. We have heard such testimonies from adolescent readers, and have had, on occasion, the same experiences ourselves. As we work with young people, preservice, and in-service teachers in the field of young adult literature, we are further convinced that these books we love have the capacity to not only impact readers on an individual level, but also to alert students to the potential they have to enact change in their communities and the world. 

​YAL tackles topics such as racism, heternormativity, poverty, and indigenous rights, not only thereby reflecting the lived experiences of students who are marginalized by systems of oppression, but also assisting readers who may have less knowledge of particular areas. Through reading, students can grow in their understanding and empathy, and potentially be inspired to take action.
 
In 2009, Steven Wolk connected YAL’s reflection of social issues to its potential to enhance readers’ democratic sensibilities.  He avowed “teaching for social responsibility with good books does far more than encourage civic participation; it redefines the purpose of school and empowers all of us—students, teachers, administrators, parents—to be better people and live more fulfilling lives” (p. 672).  His notion extends civic learning from the social studies classroom and into the English Language Arts classroom, employing books as a means to help students develop critical literacies and to unpack the world around them.  This work is crucial, especially in the contemporary moment, when democratic participation is key to creating change and addressing the multitude of inequities plaguing our society in every state across the nation as well as around the world.
We, of course, agree with Wolk, though we continually found ourselves wondering if, perhaps, there was a way to extend his work. How, we wondered, can we provide opportunities for students that build on their learning of social issues through young adult literature, opportunities that go beyond discussion and reflection and allow them to act?  This question has motivated our work as English teacher educators, researchers, and collaborators over the past four years, and we have engaged in these multiple contexts to develop and implement a process built around young adult literature that helps readers of various levels undertake social action projects. 
 
When engaging in social action projects, students determine a contemporary problem that exists in their community (local, national, or global), design steps to address it, and implement their action.  Our model, which we call COAR, includes four explicit steps:  Contextualize, Organize, Act, and Reflect (Boyd, 2017; Boyd & Darragh, 2019).  We do not conceptualize COAR as a stringent framework but rather a way to guide students through the process smoothly and with attention to detail. 
 
In the first step, contextualize, students determine a social problem rooted in their understanding from their reading.  Through trial and error, we have realized the importance of specifically narrowing from issue to problem.  For example, one group of students with whom we have worked limited their topic from ‘racism’ to ‘the stereotyping of Black men’- a topic inspired by their reading All American Boys (Reynolds & Kiely, 2015). We have learned that for students to design a project with tangible actions and results, this initial move of contextualizing and narrowing is key.  If students attempt to tackle topics that are too broad, they tend to feel overwhelmed and at a loss for what to do. Additionally, as part of this phase, it is important for students to gather information on their topic of interest. We suggest students complete extensive background research on the problem they name as well as posit why and how this problem is connected to systems of power. 
 
Next, students determine their action related to the problem they identified and organize for it.  In this step it is crucial that students contact the correct individuals needed to participate or to provide guidance for their actions.  If they were to propose a campus march to support the #BlackLivesMatter movement, for example, they would need to decide how to spread the word, what route the march would take, what permissions must be garnered, and who would speak. In the third step, students perform their planned action and collect evidence, such as images and artifacts, to document the implementation.  Finally, they reflect on the process, noting successes and challenges, and plan for next steps.  The reflection and next steps portion is key so that students can begin to view change as ongoing and realize that social action should not stop at the conclusion of one event.  
​Between the two of us, we have found success using COAR in middle school, high school, and university classrooms.  For example, in one middle school, students read All American Boys, a book about an incident of police brutality and the aftermath in the local community. One middle school reader shared that this book allowed them “to see the huge problem we have with racism and how it affects everyone.”  They applied their understandings of racism, police brutality, and white privilege to conduct a number of social action projects. For example, the whole class crafted graffiti art in the school courtyard to share messages they learned from the book and felt needed more attention.  One small group composed a rap about racial equity and shared it with the local school resource officer, and another group created anti-stereotype posters and hung them around the school (Boyd & Miller, 2019).  
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​In the university classroom, we have challenged students in our own Young Adult Literature courses to complete social action projects with the members of their college campuses as their audience.  After reading Ruta Sepeteys Between Shades of Gray (2012), a piece of historical fiction that traces a young Polish girl’s journey to survive work camps during the Stalin era, readers undertook a project to raise awareness of refugees’ experiences. They partnered with our local campus library to create a book display with additional texts and distributed requests to sign a petition related to the United Nations refugee campaign.  Of social action projects, one of the group members stated, “I think it’s an enormously valuable perspective shift to show students that they can be the ones making a difference and working for a better world.”  
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While we allowed our students to choose social justice issues connected to the young adult novels they read in our classes, an overwhelming majority of our university student groups selected mental health as their issue, narrowing their topic to various related problems.  One group, for instance, connected their work to the stigma surrounding mental health problems referenced in The Unlikely Hero of Room 13b (Toten, 2015).  In the novel, a teenage male diagnosed with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder takes part in group therapy where he meets new friends and embarks on a romantic relationship with one of his fellow members.  One cluster of our students designed an action in which they advertised resources available on campus and through student services to assist with mental health.  The students connected with a foundation established for a local football player who had recently died by suicide and distributed bracelets with messages of hope and phone numbers for campus resources in a well-trafficked area on campus after publicizing the distribution event on social media.  
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Another group partnered with a psychology professor to offer a viewing of a film that
they felt inaccurately represented mental disorders and led a critical dialogue afterward with their forty participants. Still another created an interactive display on campus with resources, books, and a space to share coping strategies for stress and anxiety. 
 
Inspired by the novel Darius the Great is Not Okay (Khorram, 2019), one group sought to investigate the ease and barriers connected to accessing mental health supports on campus. Group members identified that the new counseling center was not on current campus maps and did not have signage outside of the building to guide students to its location. This group started a petition for funding to update the campus maps and purchase a building sign. 
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​In addition to these projects, students who read Speak (Anderson, 1999) debunked dominant narratives of victim-blaming in instances of sexual assault through visual displays of clothing with accompanying messages in popular spaces on campus; others created a blog related to their reading of The Queen of Water (Resau, 2012) to describe their new awareness of human trafficking and to raise others’; and still others led an open mic event to increase attentiveness to climate change after reading Pitch Dark (Alameda, 2019).   
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This community-oriented work made the books come alive for students and gave them a way to express the indignation they felt while reading or a manner through which to share new perspectives.  Many articulated in their reflections positive sentiments such as “the greatest reward out of this project was knowing that we made an impact” or shared that the projects “get students thinking about social issues” and allow them to “engage in the world” while “involving higher level thinking to fulfill the requirements.”  Many also noted the tendency for young people to not be taken seriously, but felt this project had the potential to change those perceptions.  Young adult literature has previously connected to these more additive and complex understandings of youth (Petrone, Sarigianides, & Lewis, 2015), and these projects provide an additional validation of that possibility. 
 
We have built on our students’ work in Reading for Action: Engaging Youth in Social Justice through Young Adult Literature (2019).  In the book, we focus on one social justice topic per chapter and one young adult novel.  Amongst other topics, we include bullying, global poverty, the gender spectrum, and women’s rights, and we offer myriad before, during, and after reading strategies as well as ideas for social action projects for each. As former secondary teachers ourselves, we know how busy teachers are, so we tried to provide as many resources as possible, including other young adult and canonical texts connected to each issue, music, film, and electronic resources. Although we emphasize that ideas for action should come from the students, we hope to provide samples to illustrate the kind of work we envision that students can accomplish.    
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​Given the current predicament of schools, we feel it important to provide a brief note about the potential of these projects in a virtual space.  As much of social action projects is self-directed and relies on research and communication via the Internet, email and telephone, we believe that such work fits well in this era of online education.  Furthermore, many of our students’ projects relied on social media to advertise or to complete the action itself, as several created websites, blogs, or Twitter and Instagram accounts to raise awareness.  Even open mic nights could be held through online platforms such as Zoom and community film viewings through arenas such as Netlix Party provide a way to chat collaboratively while watching from different places. Therefore, this work can still be undertaken in the context we now face, and we hope that it is. 
 
Young adult literature gives us a medium through which to read, think, and talk about issues that may be uncomfortable for some or discerned as controversial in society.  It provides us with insight, perspective, and experience; the rich texts we have now develop readers’ empathy and afford for a depth of personal connection. We believe that harnessing this capacity of YAL and channeling it into action is key for addressing inequities and building communities. As we have said before, “Reading is important. Discussions can be valuable. But reading for action- that is something that can empower, inspire, and ultimately change the world for the better” (Boyd & Darragh, 2019, p. 195). Certainly, in these unpredictable times, we need that more than ever. 
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References

​Boyd, A. & Darragh, J.  (2019).  Reading for action:  Engaging youth in social justice
through Young Adult Literature.  Rowman & Littlefield. 
 
Boyd, A. & Miller, J.  (2020).  Let’s give them something to talk (and act!) about: 
Privilege, racism, and oppression in the middle school classroom.  Voices from the Middle, 27(3), 15-19. 
 
Boyd, A. & Darragh, J.  (2019).  Critical literacies on the university campus:  Engaging
pre-service teachers with social action projects.  English Teaching:  Practice & Critique, 19(1), 49-63.   
 
Petrone, R., Sarigianides, S.T., & Lewis, M.A. (2015). The youth lens: Analyzing
adolescence/ts in literary texts. Journal of Literacy Research, 46(4), 506-533.
 
Wolk, S.  (2009) Reading for a better world:  Teaching for social responsibility with
young adult literature.  Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 52 (8), 664-673.  
Until next week.

COVID19, Bike Riding, and Listen to YA Audio Books.

8/12/2020

 
Let’s imagine that some one in your family will be chosen by a lottery to experience the effects of the Covid virus. They will be expected to show up and report for infection. The result will be unknown. How much medical care they will receive is up in the air and how mild or serve the case will be is a mystery.
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This is one of the strange ideas I think about as I pedal my bike around Las Vegas 5 to 6 times a week. Since mid-March, I have covered over 1300 miles and 140 on a couple of 20 year old bikes with fantastic Brooks saddles. 
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Communities closed schools in the spring when the numbers of COVID cases and deaths were much lower. Yet, we are talking about going back to school in a variety of formats. I am not sure I have heard of a format that I think will be successful. By that I mean, a system or program that will really take into account poverty, racist practices and policies, teacher and parent workloads and realities, and the fact that elementary kids are restless, nose picking, clingy beings that really can’t be held accountable to were masks, not touch each other, or use screen time in appropriate was for 5 to 7 hours a day.
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As a society we seem willing to talk about starting things up as if we were in normal times. Well, we are not in normal times. The numbers are everywhere. I don’t need to recite them here. In simple terms, in six months we are at 160,000 deaths (even if we admit that some of the number are inflated it is still crazy and unacceptable.). that is more than two times the number of dead in during the entire Vietnam conflict, more than WW1, and we are approaching half the number of dead in WW2 with many projects that we will reach the 405,399 total before we have a vaccine and the pandemic under control.
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Let's go back to imagining. If we knew that we would be forced to take on COVID without question on a certain date, would we be more involved? Would we be more respectful?

Back to my bike riding. When I first started riding the streets were vacant. I saw no one on the streets and only a few cars. Now, the streets and traffic are back to normal. I am still on the streets. Why, it is safer than going to a gym. On the bike, I breathe in and out alone and without contact.
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Back to YA. As I ride, I am listening to YA books. I was in the habit of listening for about a ½ an hour of a book as I rode the stationary bike. Now a YA book is my companion for an hour or two hours is an audio book at about 1 and ½ speed.
Since March, I have read with my ears (Thanks to Teri Lesesne for that phrase.) to 25 books. It seems like it is time for a report. I am becoming a bigger and bigger fan of audio books. I am getting exercise fit and my YA fit every day in a two for one event.

Slide Show of the Books I Have Experienced.

A Closer Look at a Few

I don't regret reading any of these. I could, after all, just stop listening. I thoroughly enjoyed The Marrow Thieves, Thirteen Doorways Wolves Behind Them All, The Librarian of Auschwitz, and What if it's Us. I could write about all of them. Instead, I am going to write briefly about books that I have ignored for too long or that I might not have picked up at all if they hadn't been just waiting there to be checked out on Libby.
Exit, Pursued by a Bear by E. K. Johnston

I have know about this book for several years. Some of my colleagues have blogged about it and I know that is a key text when people connect YA to Shakespeare's plays. 

I was unprepared for the absolute power of listening to the Hermione Winters tell her story of abuse and neglect. This is a prime example of when actually listening to the text might be more powerful than just reading it. This a tremendous text that explores the consequences of rape from the point of view of a victim and a survivor.
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Countdown and Revolution by Deborah Wiles

Again, This trilogy by Deborah Wiles has been on my radar for awhile. I had it on my shelf and then I would let a student take it. As we know, those books rarely find their way back home, but they do find their way into classroom. Listening to these books back to back was a great experience. I loved how she wove the characters together from one book to the other, I loved the use of music, and I loved how real characters were mingled in with the fictional ones. 

Reading these books reminded me of reading the works of John Dos Passos. I think his USA Trilogy is too often neglected. I hope we don't do that with this wonderful trilogy.
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The Grace Year by Kim Liggett

This books was not on my radar. I did have a copy. I even had a copy on my "to be read" list. The blurb grabbed me, but I just hadn't taken it up yet. Then browsing titles through my Libby app, this one popped up. The books I had hoped to check out weren't available and I had quite a few on my wait list, but The Grace Year was ready for immediate check out. 

This was a powerful text imagining how the rights of women are often systematically stifled my community customs and beliefs. In fact, it demonstrates how easily women will push against each other to maintain those systems of oppression instead of striving to support one another.

For me this book is part fairy tale, part dystopian nightmare, and all about the strength of a young Tierney James who finds a way to survive and flourish in this speculative fiction that might remind you of the Handmaid Tale
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Sadie by Courtney Summers

Maybe above all other things I liked this book because it was a great "who done it" story. It kept me making connections throughout the whole narrative. There is a lot to love about this book in terms of its structure, his character development and its style.  It also fits within the tradition of early realistic YA fiction in which young adolescents try to figure things out with absent adults or without the help of adults who might make the world better for the adolescents in their life if they were gone.
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The Lovely War by Julie Berry

This cover didn't work for me. I get it now and it works, but I think you should check it our for yourself. This is a fantastic love story set in back ground of WW1; yet, told from the perspective of Greek gods who are in the midst of the chaos of WW2. This story is a powerful story of love, loss and reconciliation. Yes, they are still meddling in the lives of the mortals around them.
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I could say something about each of these books. I loved the simple escapism of the novels by Grisham and Patterson. I should also tale about Stamped and Please Ignore Vera Dietz. As always, I recommend that you browse around a bit.

Until next week.

How Black Speculative Fiction Both Helps Me Escape and Stay Grounded By Cindi Koudelka

8/5/2020

 
Cindi is one of the lovely people I meet as a result of hosting a Summit at UNLV. Cindi attended the first one as a presenter and has stayed connected. I love her love of YA and her perspective. We finally arranged a time for her to do a post. Take it away Cindi.

How Black Speculative Fiction Both Helps Me Escape and Stay Grounded
​ By Cindi Koudelka

I remember finishing the last chapter of Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone during my plane ride to the ILA conference in 2018. As I tried not to ugly cry in front of strangers, I needed to talk to someone because the story was so powerful. I was so struck by the themes and the parallels to the injustices in our world, I redesigned the presentation on justice oriented texts I was giving the next day so I could incorporate a read - aloud and discussion of the book.  The funny thing is that I was never a huge fan of high fantasy before that (well, except for Harry Potter). I preferred Dystopian or gritty Realistic Fiction for my daily go-to genres.
Flash forward to 2020. I was having trouble sitting down and reading—even my go-to books couldn’t keep my attention. I heard this has been a common phenomenon amidst the pandemic, so even though I didn’t feel guilty, I was feeling a bit lost. Between the pandemic and the injustices that continue to face BIPOC, I needed to escape from my worries without escaping the world to help me process and reflect. In June, Dr. Margaret Robbins wrote a brilliant post here about digital events and speculative fiction that inspired me. I was reminded how Adeyemi’s book helped me channel my emotions to reflect on my own identity, systemic oppression, positioning, and the complexities of life. So, I dug through my very deep TBR pile and sought some recommendations from Dr. Stephanie Toliver’s “Diverse Futures” website, as well as other blogs and sites sharing a wide selection of options. From there, I found several speculative fiction titles written by Black authors which gave me that critical escape I craved and helped me critically reflect about the world and take responsibility to engage in anti-racism work.
 The links for the titles take you to my favorite “black woman owned bookstore and gallery space” in Chicago, Semicolon. Not only do they carry an amazing selection of books that can be shipped anywhere, but they host #cleartheshelves events where they invite CPS Students in to the store to pick out whatever books they want free of charge.
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A Phoenix First Must Burn Sixteen Stories of Black Girl Magic, Resistance, and Hope by Patrice Caldwell
What I love most about this book (besides the incredible stories written by powerhouse authors) is that it was the perfect way for me to “return to reading”. The short story format allowed me to build my stamina back up while the range of stories’ themes and styles helped me think about the richness and complexities of lives different from my own. Within the tales, I found strong, powerful characters who as Patrice Caldwell describes in the introduction “rise from the ashes” to create their own worlds. It was so refreshing to read stories featuring black protagonists that focused on hope. L.L. McKinney (2020) noted, “We know that for every “issue” book, we need at least five more where we can go on adventures, fall in love, solve mysteries, be heroes, do everyday things like everyone else. Black readers need to see themselves in narratives outside of racism, slavery, Jim Crow, police brutality”. This book highlights the strength of black women rather than limiting them to stereotypical victims.

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Cinderella Is Dead by Kalynn Bayron 
One of the units I have incorporated with my 8th graders has been a fractured fairy tale unit. We study the genres of fairy tales across cultures and the genres of parody and satire. We then create a mashup by having the students create their own fairy tale parodies and perform them for the primary grade students. It is the highlight of the year (which they sadly missed out on this year - thanks Corona!). One part of the unit is to take several print and movie versions of Cinderella and compare them across culture and time. When I discovered this book, I practically screamed with excitement about another version - a sci fi version with a Black protagonist - to add to the comparison. Literally every version we have had has centered the European roots of the story. This retelling is a fresh take that embraces female empowerment and demonstrates the truth of Audre Lorde’s quote, “There is no thing as a single-issue struggle because we do not live single-issue lives.” Bayron interweaves race, LGBTQ, feminism, family, and colonialism into an adventurous tale that made me reflect about how we often set girls, especially BIPOC, up as objects rather than creators of their own destinies.  In this story, Cinderella has been dead for 200 years, but in Lille, everyone must live up to the legacy. Now girls are required to attend the annual ball where they are selected for marriage based on appearances. When Sophia was young, she dreamed of attending the ball, but as she got older, she started to question the “truths” she had been told her whole life. Plus, she is in love with Erin and tries to convince her to run away together. When she is forced to attend the ball, she makes a run for it and ends up in Cinderella’s mausoleum where she finds Cinderella’s last known descendent and they decide they aren’t going to run - they are going to take the whole kingdom down. I think my favorite part of the book (besides the fact that Sophia was so brave) was how nuanced the characters were. I loved the complexity of things like Sophia’s relationship with her parents. They loved her and everything they did was meant to protect her, but their protectiveness only enforced and perpetuated the oppressive situation actually endangering her.

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The Forgotten Girl by India Hill Brown
When I was younger, I loved paranormal stuff (actually based on some of my students’ interests, I wonder if that is something every teen becomes just a little obsessed with - oh man, this sounds like it could be a research study!)  This book brought me back to some of those super creepy books I loved back in the day, but the Black perspective added a much more powerful layer of criticality than just that pure escapism (or perhaps overthinking about death and afterlife). Here Iris and her friend Daniel sneak into a graveyard in the middle of winter, and it leads them on a journey of learning about their town’s history which includes the segregation that occurred right up to separate (and not equal) graveyards. Iris discovers something else too as she begins to be haunted by Avery, a girl their own age who had died in 1956. Avery’s goal is far more personal than Iris and Daniel believe, and it puts them in grave danger. This would be a great middle grade book and would be a perfect read-aloud during October for Halloween or during the snowy winter months (for those of us who have to deal with snow!). I love how the author infused the true story of segregated cemeteries into a good old-fashioned ghost story. The author’s note at the end provides the interesting background that inspired her book. This book would also be a great way to kick off an inquiry unit or inspire students to solve some unknown riddle the way that Iris and Daniel tried to learn more about Avery’s life and death. 

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Girl of Flesh and Metal by Alicia Ellis
I always enjoy stories that explore the idea of “just because we can, does it mean we should?”. I also love it when an author seamlessly blends a clever mystery into other genres. When I first looked at the cover, I thought about Marissa Meyers, Cinder, but cybernetic body parts are where the similarity ends. At the very beginning of the story, Lena was with her friends debating the growth of technology and one of her early lines struck me when she said “We’re forgetting how important it is to be human and interact with other living things. Humanity is sacred”. I thought about how that line could prompt a powerful inquiry unit in the classroom into ethics and decision-making as well as power and privilege. Lena was very anti-tech, so it was a double blow when she was fitted with a cybernetic arm at her parent’s request after a terrible accident damaged her own arm beyond repair. There are also other books, movies, and life connections for the students to supplement thinking about the themes. This book could act as an anchor text supplemented by other stories of tech use/misuse or it could be part of book clubs alongside books such as MT Anderson’s Feed, Orleans by Sherri Smith, or Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother. Additionally, you could bring in movie clips, as well as nonfiction pieces that explore how technology has both improved and hurt our lives. Now, here’s the really cool thing about this book - Ellis took the idea of tech and the conflicts inherent within society and wove it into some very intriguing ideas about power and privilege as Lena’s parents owned CyberCorp, the major tech company that ruled everything affording the family certain rights and opportunities not available to everyone. The problem is that the technology and neural chip controlling Lena’s arm is so new that it makes her a pariah among her friends as she struggles to adapt. Then, just to keep you even more engrossed in the book, somebody has killed her friend and is publicly targeting the children of CyberCorp’s employees and people believe Lena may be the one behind it. Even she wonders if she could have done it during one of her strange sleepwalking episodes. From there the book weaves in ethical questions as Lena tries to find out the truth.

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Children of Virtue and Vengeance (Legacy of Orïsha, #2) by Tomi Adeyemi
It seems only fitting that I close out this post with a little bit about the sequel to the book that ignited a new passion for fantasy. Technically, I read this one before the Pandemic, but much like the first book, it kept me on the edge of my seat as I rejoined Zélie’s journey as she and the other Maji faced a Civil War after she has brought magic back. I absolutely adored the various ethical dilemmas that each character faced as they navigated relationships, power, and positioning. The story made me think a lot about Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed when he discusses how the oppressed can become the oppressors when they are not involved in their own liberation. As Zélie struggles with her own guilt, desires, and pressure as the reluctant leader, she sometimes loses sight of the goal for liberation for the sake of vengeance. Adeyemi’s gift is creating this magical world to escape into while keeping you grounded in the realities of life, the injustices as well as the beauty.

References
McKinney, L.L. (2020, June 17). The role publishing plays in the commodification of Black pain. Tor.com. http://https://www.tor.com/2020/06/17/the-role-publishing-plays-in-the-commodification-of-black-pain/

Dr. Cindi Koudelka ([email protected]; @cmkoudelka) is a Curriculum Specialist with National Board Certification in Adolescent Young Adulthood/English Language Arts at Fieldcrest School District in Illinois and an Adjunct faculty member at Aurora University.  Being a bibliophile and school nerd, she holds multiple certifications from PreK - 12 and is an active member in several literacy and research organizations. Her research interests reflect her passion as a youth advocate by focusing her work on critical adolescent literacies, young adult literature, positioning, and youth participatory action research.

    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Co-Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

    Bickmore's
    ​Co-Edited Books

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    Meet
    Evangile Dufitumukiza!
    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

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