On a related note from yesterday:
I saw
this post by Ceepolk in a thread about adding Social Justice concerns to one's art. Ceepolk's advice:
With a lot of work and a lot of awareness and a lot of understanding, and know that you will **** it up anyway.
I would suggest that you join tumblr and start a tumblr and use it for reblog without comment purposes, and then start following people who are black, concentrate on women, and read it. regularly. and don't comment on anything you read, and for the love of bob don't tell anyone you're studying them. and if you find after a week that you're still doing it to study them, step away from the tumblr and don't go back for a month, and don't write that character you're thinking you ought to write because of whatever reason you have, because you can't do this thing if you can't see us as people.
I also think that you should sit yourself down and read Racefail '09 from the beginning. Yes, the whole damn thing. And Mammothfail as well.
This post symbolizes so much of what is wrong with A+:
1. Completely incoherent advice. "You want to write WOC? Read these tumblrs. But don't say anything or actually engage in any way. And, actually, that's spying so don't read those tumblrs. And don't try again for a month for some reason. And you're probably doing it with bad intentions, which are now magic unlike all those previous times. In fact, just don't write WOC at all."
2. Uselessly vague advice, probably attributable to 'lacking spoons.' "Read all of Racefail?" Racefail was huge and covered a vast multitude of topics, ranging from whether or not 'nithing' is a slur to whether or not Jews are 'other' in today's society to 'how allies can sponsor a 'POC issue' of a magazine without it being offensive.' Saying 'the answer's in Racefail' doesn't really give you much of a place to start. It adds nothing to the conversation.
3. Off-topic, and therefore irrelevant, advice.
Mammothfail has nothing to do with any of this. That was when Patricia Wrede wrote a book set in AU America where dinosaurs still roamed around the interior, and no one made it over the landbridge from Russia to settle in America, so there were no Native Americans. This was condemned as erasure by some SJ Advocates and SJWs. (It didn't last long online, probably because Wrede was smart and didn't really make a huge public response to it, at least that I recall). That has nothing to do with 'I want to include a person with identity X, how can I get it right?' Again, this just seems lazy, like Ceepolk has a stock 'I'm an ally and want to help' response.
4. Assumption that tumblr is the only means for interaction or learning anything. What about reading actual books? "Writing the Other" by Nisi Shawl is a great resource for precisely this issue. Read books about writing, and particularly writing people that aren't like you. Read books by, and about, the identity you want to write about. Strike up conversations with members of the group on whatever forum you fancy. Listen to music, eat food, and in general experience what you can so you get a better idea of what you're doing. Read other books in your genre that have done the same thing, see what they got right and wrong, and plan accordingly. There's so much more that could be said here, but Ceepolk just says, "Yeah, tumblr's got what you need, except you're too privileged and terrible to use it."
5. Assumption that failure is guaranteed and so the writer shouldn't even bother. Because deliberately excluding POC from your writing/art for fear that you won't get things perfect is definitely the anti-racist thing to do!
6. Finally, I get the impression that Ceepolk's comment is more designed to punish the author for having the temerity to try writing with a diverse cast as opposed to actual help. Lack of diversity in art is a big issue in various SJ communities currently. If Ceepolk actually cared about fighting that kind of problem, one would think she would want another person who is trying to do something to succeed. But she'd rather tear them down than help them make progress towards her ostensible goals of greater representation and equality.