By Roxane Gay
June 6th, 2012
After the VIDA counts in 2010 and 2011, as well as Jennifer Weiner’s count she released on her blog in January 2012, I wanted to see where things stood for writers of color. Race often gets lost in the gender conversation as if it’s an issue we’ll get to later. I’ve wondered about where race fits into the conversation and who will take up that issue with the same zeal VIDA has approached gender.
If women are underrepresented in certain echelons of publishing, writers of color are likely to face similar issues. As I considered this problem, I had no proof, though, and when it comes to confronting inequities in representation, people want proof. They won’t just take your word that the sky is falling. They need to see the sky shattered, on the ground. And even when you do have proof, people will try to discount your findings. We’ve seen this with birthers and global warming deniers and the like. When I set out to see where things stand in terms of race, I decided I wasn’t going to try to prove anything to anyone. I simply went on a fact-finding mission and found some facts.
A lot of the data compilation requires painstaking work and there are few guarantees of accuracy. There is no centralized database tracking the gender or race of the writers who are published or reviewed in major publications. Most of the data compilation, particularly when it comes to race, is comprised of best approximations.
I tasked my amazing, incredibly thorough graduate assistant, Philip Gallagher, with looking at every book review published in the New York Times in 2011, identifying the race and gender of the reviewed titles’ authors. The project took fourteen weeks, with Philip going at it for about sixteen hours each week because the only way to find out the race of each writer was to research them. Information for some authors was more readily available than others. Some information was simply ambiguous. Some information could not be found. We originally set out to look at several major publications but without an army of volunteers, it will never be possible to compile a dataset on race similar to VIDA’s. It is simply too difficult to identify race without a great deal of effort and even then, it’s hard to know just how accurate that data is.
We looked at 742 books reviewed, across all genres. Of those 742, 655 were written by Caucasian authors (1 transgender writer, 437 men, and 217 women). Thirty-one were written by Africans or African Americans (21 men, 10 women), 9 were written by Hispanic authors (8 men, 1 woman), 33 by Asian, Asian-American or South Asian writers (19 men, 14 women), 8 by Middle Eastern writers (5 men, 3 women) and 6 were books written by writers whose racial background we were simply unable to identify.

The numbers are depressing but I cannot say I am shocked. The numbers reflect the overall trend in publishing where the majority of books published are written by white writers.
There’s a lot that’s incomplete about the data. Writers were grouped into rather broad racial and ethnic categories. The New York Times is only one publication, though certainly, it is one of the preeminent book review outlets. We only looked at one year. Without data about how many books were published by writers, across race, it’s hard to know if the numbers are proportionate or not.
Still.
The numbers are grim. Nearly 90% of the books reviewed by The New York Times are written by white writers. That is not even remotely reflective of the racial makeup of this country, where 72% of the population, according to the 2010 census, is white. We know that far more than 81 books were published by writers of color in 2011. You don’t really need other datasets to see this rather glaring imbalance.
These days, it is difficult for any writer to get a book published. We’re all clawing. However, if you are a writer of color, not only do you face a steeper climb getting your book published, you face an even more arduous journey if you want that book to receive critical attention. It shouldn’t be this way. Writers deserve that same fighting chance regardless of who they are but here we are, talking about the same old thing—these institutional biases that even by a count of 2011 data, remain deeply ingrained.
I don’t know how to solve this problem or what to do with this information. I’m not riled up. I’m informed. I like seeing some numbers, having some sense of the scope of a problem. I like knowing where things stand. Hopefully these numbers will encourage review outlets to be more inclusive in reviewing books—considering race, gender and let us not forget sexuality or other brands of difference—rather than treating diversity as a compartmentalized issue where we can only focus on one kind of inequity at a time. Such mindfulness is important. If we want to encourage people to be better, broader readers, that effort starts by giving readers a better, broader selection of books to choose from.
Source and additional article on the same topic.
While not particularly surprising, seeing the numbers laid out like this is very important and striking.
June 6th, 2012
After the VIDA counts in 2010 and 2011, as well as Jennifer Weiner’s count she released on her blog in January 2012, I wanted to see where things stood for writers of color. Race often gets lost in the gender conversation as if it’s an issue we’ll get to later. I’ve wondered about where race fits into the conversation and who will take up that issue with the same zeal VIDA has approached gender.
If women are underrepresented in certain echelons of publishing, writers of color are likely to face similar issues. As I considered this problem, I had no proof, though, and when it comes to confronting inequities in representation, people want proof. They won’t just take your word that the sky is falling. They need to see the sky shattered, on the ground. And even when you do have proof, people will try to discount your findings. We’ve seen this with birthers and global warming deniers and the like. When I set out to see where things stand in terms of race, I decided I wasn’t going to try to prove anything to anyone. I simply went on a fact-finding mission and found some facts.
A lot of the data compilation requires painstaking work and there are few guarantees of accuracy. There is no centralized database tracking the gender or race of the writers who are published or reviewed in major publications. Most of the data compilation, particularly when it comes to race, is comprised of best approximations.
I tasked my amazing, incredibly thorough graduate assistant, Philip Gallagher, with looking at every book review published in the New York Times in 2011, identifying the race and gender of the reviewed titles’ authors. The project took fourteen weeks, with Philip going at it for about sixteen hours each week because the only way to find out the race of each writer was to research them. Information for some authors was more readily available than others. Some information was simply ambiguous. Some information could not be found. We originally set out to look at several major publications but without an army of volunteers, it will never be possible to compile a dataset on race similar to VIDA’s. It is simply too difficult to identify race without a great deal of effort and even then, it’s hard to know just how accurate that data is.
We looked at 742 books reviewed, across all genres. Of those 742, 655 were written by Caucasian authors (1 transgender writer, 437 men, and 217 women). Thirty-one were written by Africans or African Americans (21 men, 10 women), 9 were written by Hispanic authors (8 men, 1 woman), 33 by Asian, Asian-American or South Asian writers (19 men, 14 women), 8 by Middle Eastern writers (5 men, 3 women) and 6 were books written by writers whose racial background we were simply unable to identify.

The numbers are depressing but I cannot say I am shocked. The numbers reflect the overall trend in publishing where the majority of books published are written by white writers.
There’s a lot that’s incomplete about the data. Writers were grouped into rather broad racial and ethnic categories. The New York Times is only one publication, though certainly, it is one of the preeminent book review outlets. We only looked at one year. Without data about how many books were published by writers, across race, it’s hard to know if the numbers are proportionate or not.
Still.
The numbers are grim. Nearly 90% of the books reviewed by The New York Times are written by white writers. That is not even remotely reflective of the racial makeup of this country, where 72% of the population, according to the 2010 census, is white. We know that far more than 81 books were published by writers of color in 2011. You don’t really need other datasets to see this rather glaring imbalance.
These days, it is difficult for any writer to get a book published. We’re all clawing. However, if you are a writer of color, not only do you face a steeper climb getting your book published, you face an even more arduous journey if you want that book to receive critical attention. It shouldn’t be this way. Writers deserve that same fighting chance regardless of who they are but here we are, talking about the same old thing—these institutional biases that even by a count of 2011 data, remain deeply ingrained.
I don’t know how to solve this problem or what to do with this information. I’m not riled up. I’m informed. I like seeing some numbers, having some sense of the scope of a problem. I like knowing where things stand. Hopefully these numbers will encourage review outlets to be more inclusive in reviewing books—considering race, gender and let us not forget sexuality or other brands of difference—rather than treating diversity as a compartmentalized issue where we can only focus on one kind of inequity at a time. Such mindfulness is important. If we want to encourage people to be better, broader readers, that effort starts by giving readers a better, broader selection of books to choose from.
Source and additional article on the same topic.
While not particularly surprising, seeing the numbers laid out like this is very important and striking.
Anyway, for anyone disgusted by the statics I would like to suggest http://50books-poc.dreamwidth.org/
When I was a kid, I wanted to be an author. One day I realized that all the characters I wanted to write about were white, and I couldn't really figure out why it was so hard for me, as a black child, to imagine any characters who looked like me. I guess it was because I'd only ever read about white characters.
You know I thought this too when I started the 50 books by poc challenge. I'm really into lit fic and thought that there were no poc authors in that field and I was wrong. So, so wrong. It's just that there names aren't as out there. But I guarantee whatever genre you're interested in there are poc writing good stuff.
When I was a kid, I wanted to be an author. One day I realized that all the characters I wanted to write about were white, and I couldn't really figure out why it was so hard for me, as a black child, to imagine any characters who looked like me. I guess it was because I'd only ever read about white characters.
Yep. This speaks to me so deeply. It wasn't until I looked at my own writing and realized I had trouble expressing that my characters weren't white that I started reading books written by poc and writing poc into my own work.
Dude, me too. On top of that, they were all White men, and I was starting to have an identity crisis, wondering why I seemed to be a White man on the inside.
I suspect the defense is that they're reacting to what people read but I've found people pleasantly open minded when looking for something new. Not just willing to read Ondaatje but Brenda Jackson and other "black romances."
Granted, I choose what to display at my library but I put out books by Nnedi Okorafor and Esi Edugyan and they go. I wonder if the US is worse off than Canada or if it's generational thing. I find the 60+ readers, especially the English, are more conservative in general about what they read while the under-30s don't seem to care at all.
Edited at 2012-06-19 10:34 pm (UTC)
Yeah, I've noticed that the Giller Prize usually has one or two poc authors in their nominees. And if you look at the actual winners there are quite a few poc as well, although Edugyan was the first woc to ever win. But again these are the people who win critics prizes and therefore are guaranteed reviews. If reviewers are reviewing only white males than that's all most people are going to be aware of.
And if I can be a douche for a moment, if you want to see what being a white man does for an author, look no further than Michael Crichton. He was as bad as Stephenie Meyer and nobody ever talks about it.
http://reservoircat.tumblr.com/post/254
Marjorie Liu is the queen of my heart btw. Best writer to ever go near Black Widow and X23 for Marvel and her non-comic work is especially brilliant too.
...also omg it's a bit like a who's who of the anthology I was in. "Hey they're on my flist! Them too! ...Waitaminnit, this is reading like the TOC here." They are all awesome though so glad to see them in there. XD
It's about a god damned good story!
If you write a good story, novle or whatever - that's all that matters.
If people take into account if someone is not White, they suck.
They should be looking at the talent the writer has given them, not their skin colour.
What idiotic, stupid, cracktastic shit is that!?
Now shut the fuck up and go away.
Except for the part where publishers avoid books with strong, well-written PoC characters with such frequency that there is no way in hell it's 'coincidental'. Aside from the ST:TNG books I read as a child (and here's a hint for you: Very few of them focused on Geordi, and the ones that focused on Worf were very 'proud warrior culture' in the extreme) it wasn't until Tamora Pierce's Circle of Magic books (which came out when I was around 17) that I can remember there being PoCs as main characters. As in, not just there to further the main (white) character's story.
And the rare few times where books with PoCs get adapted or picked up by the mainstream media? Take a look at Earthsea for how *that* tends to go. Or more recently, Hunger Games, or the utter *shitfit* over the casting for Heimdall in the Thor movie.
This is a problem, and a major one.
You don't strike me as someone who is very knowledgeable about pretty much anything at all, so perhaps you need a trip to the library.
Edited at 2012-06-20 03:03 am (UTC)
One of the things we are made of is stories. If your world has no stories with people like you, you can't feel as much a part of the world. A modest example is the TV show Rosanne. Even though TV is pretty completely white (the occasional big blinking sign saying Look!! Not White!!! doesn't count for much), where are the working stiffs?
Then, if you want to sell your writing, you have to deal with publishers, marketers, and on and on.
You'll look much less a horse's ass if you look at what's around you more than how you imagine it. Keeping your mouth shut more might help too.
I need to into Octavia E. Butler but it's so hard to find e-books of her stuff. There is some downloads but I am a bit sketchy about the sources...