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Michelle Martin a crusader for diversity

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Endowed professorships in children鈥檚 literature are rare 鈥 鈥10 may be a stretch,鈥 says scholar Michelle H. Martin.  Holding one is a high honor. Now Martin 鈥 renowned author, essayist, lecturer, book critic, community literacy activist, and champion of diversity in children鈥檚 literature 鈥 can put two on her resume. This fall Martin joins the iSchool as the Beverly Cleary Endowed Professor in Children and Youth Services.

She has ambitious goals for her new post, but her first job, she says, is simply to listen. 鈥淚 want to meet with librarians and find out what is going on, what are their needs, how my skill set might map onto this habitat,鈥 says Martin, relaxing inside her still-bare office at Mary Gates Hall, where warm greetings from iSchool staff scrawl across her whiteboard: 鈥淲elcome, Michelle!,鈥 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to connect.鈥

The iSchool鈥檚 Beverly Cleary Endowed Professorship, last held by the late Eliza Dresang, was one of the first of its kind when it launched in 2005. Cleary, a 1939 graduate of what was then the UW School of Librarianship, was a children鈥檚 librarian who saw kids struggling to read books that had no characters they could relate to. Cleary set out to create those funny, everyday, everykid characters in books such as 鈥淩amona the Pest鈥 and 鈥淒ear Mr. Henshaw.鈥 She became one of the nation鈥檚 most beloved, best-selling children鈥檚 authors.

iSchool dean Harry Bruce, who convinced Martin to accept the iSchool professorship, says she exemplifies the spirit of Cleary. 鈥淢rs. Cleary鈥檚 impressive body of work was motivated by her commitment to produce stories in which generations of children can see themselves. Professor Martin鈥檚 research and her service work in the community are in perfect alignment. She is committed to literacy development, access, and identity confirmation for black youth in children鈥檚 literature.鈥

Martin shares Cleary鈥檚 vision. 鈥淪he has spent her life writing books for children who had been left out of the literary record, and, in many ways, I have spent my academic career writing about the books left out of the literary canon,鈥 says the engaging professor, who has argued passionately for inclusion of books about children of color on library shelves and in school reading lists.

鈥淲hy just keep giving kids 鈥楾he Secret Garden鈥 when there are all these other great books out there,鈥 says Martin, citing examples such as 鈥淲hat a Truly Cool World,鈥 which stars God as a bald-headed black man with a wife, Irene God, and a personal assistant, Shaniqua, determined to add some color to the boring green, brown, and blue world he has created.

michelle_martin350.jpgSuch books remain a rarity in children鈥檚 publishing. Of approximately 3,200 children鈥檚 books published in 2015, 243 were about African Americans, less than 8 percent. Only 105 of the books were written by African Americans. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exceedingly difficult for minorities to break into the industry,鈥 says Martin, who is pushing to make changes. 鈥淭he whole industry is largely controlled by whites.鈥

A prolific, clear-eyed writer, Martin has produced a multitude of national book reviews and critical essays, including a soon-to-be-published co-authored article on the politics of hair in African-American children鈥檚 picture books. She covers books such as 鈥淐ornrows鈥 and 鈥淗appy to be Nappy鈥 that celebrate natural black beauty and defuse the pressure on girls to conform to white beauty standards, straightening hair with flat irons, hot combs, chemical relaxers, pomades, and sprays. 鈥淭here has not been a lot written about this in children鈥檚 literature,鈥 says Martin, who wears her own hair in a close-to-the-scalp barbershop buzz, a 鈥榙o she finds 鈥渇reeing.鈥

Martin has pioneered scholarship in her field with such seminal books as 鈥淏rown Gold:  Milestones of African American Children鈥檚 Picture Books, 1845-2002.鈥 It explores a literary evolution that begins with such brazenly racist works such as the 鈥淐oontown鈥 series and the nursery ditty 鈥淭en Little Niggers,鈥 written by and for whites, and moves toward the 1960s, when a revolutionized literature explored the civil rights movement and the black arts movement. In some ways, the genre got stuck there. 鈥淚f you write a children鈥檚 book about African-American culture and it鈥檚 not about civil rights or slavery or a famous black person, the likelihood of it getting published is very low,鈥 says Martin. 鈥淲here are the books about the daily-ness of the lives of children of color?鈥

She is at work now on a book about the two 鈥渇athers of African-American children鈥檚 literature,鈥 Langston Hughes and Arna Bontemps, writers in the 1920s Harlem Renaissance who created a large body of work for children celebrating African-American life, much of it still unpublished and unexplored. 鈥淭his will be the first critical book on their work for children,鈥 says Martin.

She comes to the iSchool from the University of South Carolina, where she held the Augusta Baker Endowed Chair in Childhood Literacy, a position created to address high illiteracy rates in the state and named for the first African-American in the New York Public Library System administration.

South Carolina colleagues have described Martin as a 鈥渄ynamic leader鈥 and someone with a 鈥渄eep understanding of what it takes to produce a reader.鈥 Along with her Ph.D. in Children鈥檚 Literature and Composition, the high-energy outdoorswoman holds a master鈥檚 degree in Outdoor Teacher Education. She has taught swimming and bicycle spinning, and is a Gold Award Girl Scout, the top achievement in the organization, focused on community service. Her 13-year-old daughter is already a Bronze Girl Scout, and both her parents were Scout leaders in South Carolina.

Her combined love of the outdoors and children鈥檚 literature led her to spearhead a literacy immersion program in 2001 called 鈥淩ead-a-Rama,鈥 a summer day camp for 4- to 11-year-olds that moves among churches, libraries, and community centers with high populations of low-income children, who often suffer significant academic 鈥渟lide鈥 during summer months, and among schools with low reading proficiency levels.

Read-a-Rama, staffed largely by Martin鈥檚 university students, centers fun activities like fishing and insect investigations around a book鈥檚 theme. If the book is 鈥淲et Dog,鈥 about an overheated dog looking for water, camp may be a 鈥渟plash week鈥 that includes swimming, visits to a water park, lessons on the properties of water, and splatter art projects with watercolors. Songs, chants, movement, and games also revolve around the theme. Children learn to 鈥渓ive鈥 books.

鈥淥ur mantra is 鈥100 percent engagement, 100 percent of the time,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淎nd 鈥楧ead time will kill your program.鈥欌

Martin plans to expand the program to the Northwest, and eventually take it national. 鈥淚 can see it doing well everywhere from Native American reservations to the Broadview public library in my neighborhood,鈥 she says.

Martin is a strong believer in the power of the book, even in an age of glowing screens and binging distractions. Nothing, she maintains, can captivate an audience like a well-told story. Not TV. Not computer games. How do you convince kids of that? 鈥淵ou read to them,鈥 says the professor.

And in a country where more than 40 percent of children are non-white, the more diverse the books you read, the more powerful the impact. Martin cites an analogy coined by African-American children鈥檚 literature scholar Rudine Sims Bishop. 鈥淐hildren need mirrors, windows, and sliding-glass doors. Mirrors to see themselves. Windows to see how other people live. Sliding doors to have vicarious experiences that will make them think more broadly about the world.鈥

Adds Martin: 鈥淚f you only read about people who look like you and live like you, what a small world you live in.鈥