Eight-year-old KC is an activist in the making. When she found sexist childrenās books at in Berkeley, KC protested the way most kids do ā by crying. But through her tears, she articulated her anger, and the bookstore staff listened.
KCās mother, science writer Constance Cooper, was browsing the bookstore when she suddenly heard her daughter call, āāMama! You have to look at this!āā . āSo, of course, I thought she’d found something she wanted to buy, but it was completely the opposite. She was looking at two books that had made her so enraged she was actually in tears.ā
āThe [book] that got to my daughter the most was because she loves camping,ā Cooper said. āIt was sad to read ācamping may not always be a girl’s top choice of activity, but here’s how to make the best of a bad situation and survive in style.ā The picture had a girl dreaming about lounging on a beach. Later it said, āBesides, fresh air is excellent for the skin, and a brisk walk is a marvelous workout.āā
KC āinsistedā that they tell the staff about the troublesome books, and an employee overheard, according to Constance Cooperās . The employees then moved the books to a less visible area in the childrenās section. When they got home, KC wrote a on Amazon.com:
āHi. I am an 8 year old girl and I saw some very offensive books. In the girl’s book it said that girls don’t like camping and in the boy’s book it said boys like exploring nature and all that fun stuff, while girls don’t. All I had to read was the table of contents and it made me cry. Do not buy these books for your daughter, or it may make her cry like I did.ā
To protect your reading partners from sexist childrenās books, hereās an easy checklist by the California Department of Education: ā.ā
- Check the illustration
- Check the storyline
- Look at the lifestyles
- Weigh the relationships among people
- Note the heros
- Consider the effects of a childās self image
- Check out the authorās perspective
- Watch for loaded words
- Look at the copyright date
- Consider literacy, and historical and cultural perspectives
As the checklist asks, āWhat happens to a girlās self-image when she reads that boys perform all brave and important deeds? What is the effect on a girlās self-esteem if she is not fair of skin and slim of body?ā Stories have a profound effect on children. We should choose books that donāt pigeonhole childrenās identities, but expand the possibilities for themselves and their futures.
