Given the legacy of 500 years of colonization, sharing and telling stories for children and young adults about difficult truths is important in moving forward towards reconciliation. As part of the journey, increased sensibilities and approaches are needed and give rise to many questions. How can children’s literature be decolonized and made appropriate for 21st century learners? What role do writers, illustrators, teachers, teacher-librarians and children’s librarians play in the process? What ethical and respectful approaches are employed to decolonize the creation, dissemination and use of literature, especially about issues that readers find stressful and upsetting? Who should tell the stories? What are the risks and benefits of appropriation and commodification of cultural heritage? And what critical analysis skills are essential when promoting and sharing literature that is both historic and an ongoing expression of colonization? Join our School Library Day conversation, to hear from our panelists.
Event Details:
When: October 26, 2016 4:00-6:00 pm
Where: Irving K. Barber Centre Chilcotin Board Room (Room 256)
Panelists:
Maggie De Vries will talk as a writer and editor. She edited Fatty Legs and A Stranger at Home and wrote the teen novel, Rabbit Ears.
Gordon Powell will provide insights as a teacher, teacher-librarian and district principal for Aboriginal Education in Surrey about First Nations collections and integrating aboriginal content.
Julie Flett will speak about her work as a Cree-Metis Canadian author and illustrator and how she indigenizes picture books for children.
Arushi Raina will comment about apartheid and growing up as a teenager in South Africa and how that influenced her debut young adult novel, When Morning Comes.
Free event, featuring light food and refreshments.
Webcasts of past National School Library Day Events include:
“Engaging Youth with Indigenous Materials in Libraries and Classrooms”
“Connecting Authors and Readers: Documenting Atlantic Canadian Books for Youth”
“The Place and Space for Canadian Children’s Literature in Our Lives and Libraries“
National School Library Day Colloquium is hosted by the UBC Education Library and UBC iSchool.