January 9, 2006
The Op-Ed Page
229 West 43rd Street
New York, NY 10036
Dear Editors:
As I read Nick Chiles' article, "Their Eyes Were Reading Smut" (January 4, 2006)
I was overcome with feelings of déjà vu. His words and experiences echoed my
own and those of others who have become frustrated by the preponderance of
"street lit" in the marketplace. Yes, this literature has left the tables of
urban street vendors, and it has been integrated into African American literary
sections in mainstream and independent bookstores. It has taken over the
publishing industry. The question is why?
Why are publishers promoting "street literature?' What is the appeal? Why has
this literature become the standard for what is commercially viable and
marketable? One clear reason is that it is being read and purchased. It moves
quickly from the shelves of the vendors and booksellers into the hands of a
range of writers including young black female readers and those inner city
readers whose lives it mirrors and glorifies. As Chiles notes, many applaud it
because it reveals that people are reading. Yes, they are reading, but is this a
starting point to engage them as readers who will eventually expand their
reading interests or is this representative of all that they are reading?
An equally important reason for the rise in "street lit" is that publishers
invest in the literature of those who have demonstrated an ability not only to
write but to market their books. These writers know what it takes to publish.
They understand that their book will not sell unless they develop a plan for
marketing it. In short, they understand the business of promoting books.
The rise in urban street literature is a reflection of our fast- paced,
internet- based culture, a culture in which writing as a way of thinking and as
an imaginative act has been reduced to writing as a vehicle for getting one's
message across quickly, and where concern for form, grammar, and even
punctuation has become negligible. Those of us who are frustrated by an
inability to get serious literary writing published are many, and include
readers, writers, agents, editors, academics, and publishers. We have to devise
our own marketing strategy for making our voices heard, and we have to hold the
publishing industry more accountable for its publications.
A
first step is to create forums where those who are interested in engaging in
more literary and diverse reading can raise critical questions about the
literature being published and can exchange ideas about how to get the attention
of the publishing industry . The National Black Writers Conference at Medgar
Evers College is one venue for raising these issues. This biannual conference
brings together writers, readers, agents, editors, publishers, booksellers and
the general public to raise consciousness about black literary writers and black
literary texts, and to examine the themes and issues in black literature.
We must also find a way to create mechanisms for promoting literary writers
whose voices are not being heard and whose literature has become marginalized.
Because these writers are more concerned with writing than with promoting their
books, they may never get the recognition they deserve. Writing is the first
step, but marketing the book is just as essential.
It is not only writers themselves who have to take responsibility, however. We
also have to put pressure on publishers and make them understand that the range
of black literary fiction is vast, and as those responsible for introducing the
public to this literature, they have secondary ethical responsibilities. In
addition to selling books, they have the responsibility to introduce their
readers to the full panoply of black literature. As Chiles reminds us, there is
a need for a balance between publishing quality writing and more urban writing.
If there is to be a weight in one direction, let it be towards promoting
well-crafted literary texts.
Sincerely,
Brenda M. Greene,
Ph.D., Professor
of English
Executive Director, Center for Black Literature
Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York
Related Links
AALBC.com Discussion Board Commentary on "Their Eyes Were Reading Smut"
http://www.thumperscorner.com/discus/messages/1/8893.html?1136597432