This statement should be on WisCon's official site by tonight sometime (our webmistress is busy during the day), and will be in the next eCube.
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Welcoming people of color to WisCon is a central value of the entire WisCon convention committee, and has been so for over a decade.
We are aware that our efforts in this area have been incomplete and sometimes unsuccessful and we are committed to doing better.
To that end, we continue to welcome suggestions for how to improve. The more constructive and specific those suggestions are, the more likely it is that the all-volunteer WisCon committee will be able to implement them. WisCon’s history shows that change happens best when spearheaded by a champion or a group of champions who bring additional energy along with their ideas. However, we care enough about this issue that many current committee members are ready to commit additional time and energy to improving our track record.
To that end, we are proud that WisCon 33 will host the first Cultural Appropriation 101 class that we’re aware of in the science fiction world, as suggested and created by the Carl Brandon Society. The class will take place on Friday afternoon and (again at the request of the Carl Brandon Society) will be clearly delineated as “highly recommended” for anyone who wishes to attend any programming on these topics. In addition. moderators of panels related to this topic will be provided with class materials well before the convention.
We are currently about 2 months away from the convention. We’re looking for additional ideas that we can implement in that time frame, as well as ideas for WisCons to come. Because WisCon is a physical space with many tendrils extending into the virtual world, one of the things we can best provide is space for face-to-face networking and problem-solving. To that end, we’re planning to set aside a room during the convention for discussion of moving-forward strategies and potential improvements. We will work closely with people of color to ensure that this does not become a space in which the offenses recycle.
We’ve extended our guest of honor nomination process for an additional 3 weeks specifically to encourage nominations of potential GoHs of color. To nominate a GoH for next year, send an e-mail to concom33@wiscon.info by Sunday, March 22 describing why you think they would be a good guests of honor.
A group of WisCon members are organizing scholarships to bring people of color to WisCon.
These issues are not just important for people of color; they are important for all of us. The more we can do to improve in this area, the better WisCon will be. We ask for your help and guidance in achieving this goal: contact concom33@wiscon.info with your ideas.
| | Debbie N. ( |
March 12 2009, 18:50:52 UTC 3 years ago
March 12 2009, 18:58:19 UTC 3 years ago
March 13 2009, 04:44:42 UTC 3 years ago
March 13 2009, 17:59:11 UTC 3 years ago
March 13 2009, 15:58:09 UTC 3 years ago
March 14 2009, 04:01:20 UTC 3 years ago
March 14 2009, 05:00:11 UTC 3 years ago
March 20 2009, 20:22:10 UTC 3 years ago
What sort of "offenses" are being talked about? Was there some issue in the past?
I thought WisCon was open to all people who are intested in sf/fantasy without gender, race, or religious bias, etc. Isn't everyone free to come to the con? I've attended many cons where people of all races, creeds, sexual orientation and so on were there. Why is there a special push to get people of other races to come to the con?
Pardon me for asking, but I'm puzzled...
Thanks!
March 23 2009, 02:53:43 UTC 3 years ago
The push to get people of color to come to WisCon is partly in response to the Science Fiction/Fantasy community being a largely white space. Fans of color sometimes feel unsafe in mostly-white spaces, where know-it-all geeks become hostile if a fan of color says something like, "I don't like that show because there isn't anyone in it who looks like me," or something of the like.
A lot of people of color can't afford to come, or don't feel like they would be welcome (due to things such as RaceFail 9000, which I explain below).
As for the "offenses," there have been controversial WisCon panels in the past, related to race (Cultural Appropriation), in which people of color and white allies were disgusted with the way in which clueless white people reacted to conversations about race (But I am oppressed because I am GEEKY / My family was POOR / I have black friends and they didn't mind this specific depiction of people of color in media!).
More specifically, and more recently, RaceFail 9000 has been taking place online, mostly on LiveJournal, for the last few months.
To find out what it is, I suggest this timeline, and then this one.