Content advisory text
Posted: November 20th, 2020, 1:57 pm
Hi all,
I just started a Tom Swift book project as book coordinator, and as I was dividing it into chapters noticed that there is a supporting "comic relief" character that is typical black stereotypes of the time -- talks in dialect, keeps buying gadgets but gets flummoxed by "technology" and thinks Tom is doing some sort of "hoodoo" when he invents something to fix the problem...that sort of thing. He's refered to several times as a "darky" in the narration and uses the n-word once in dialog in reference to himself. There's also a "tramp" character who shows up who is also stereotyped, though not racially, and he's actually a bad guy in disguise so that's less problematic to me. (Some good-guy "tramps" also show up and help Tom!)
So anyway, I want to add an advisory to the book description and was looking without success for a similar one on some other piece of fiction, especially a kids or YA book, that has similar issues to "lift" or base mine on, and haven't been having any luck. So can anyone point me to a book that has such an advisory in its description?
Thanks!
Colleen
I just started a Tom Swift book project as book coordinator, and as I was dividing it into chapters noticed that there is a supporting "comic relief" character that is typical black stereotypes of the time -- talks in dialect, keeps buying gadgets but gets flummoxed by "technology" and thinks Tom is doing some sort of "hoodoo" when he invents something to fix the problem...that sort of thing. He's refered to several times as a "darky" in the narration and uses the n-word once in dialog in reference to himself. There's also a "tramp" character who shows up who is also stereotyped, though not racially, and he's actually a bad guy in disguise so that's less problematic to me. (Some good-guy "tramps" also show up and help Tom!)
So anyway, I want to add an advisory to the book description and was looking without success for a similar one on some other piece of fiction, especially a kids or YA book, that has similar issues to "lift" or base mine on, and haven't been having any luck. So can anyone point me to a book that has such an advisory in its description?
Thanks!
Colleen