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Chargement... Jake and Honeybunch Go to Heavenpar Margot Zemach
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The exuberance of a man and his mule newly arrived in heaven causes so much furor that God gives them one last chance before He throws them out. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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I'd actually never heard of this book, although Margot Zemach - winner of the Caldecott Medal in 1974 for Duffy and the Devil - is a name with which I am familiar, until Betsy Hearne mentioned it in her article Nobody Knows..., printed in the September/October 2009 issue of the Horn Book Magazine, devoted to the theme of "Trouble." In it, she compares the book to another depiction of an African-American heaven, Julius Lester's What A Truly Cool World, implying (the mention is very brief) that the chief trouble with Zemach's book, and the real source of the controversy, is that she is not African-American herself. Michelle H. Martin, in Build Me a Cabin in the Corner of Glory Land: Depictions of Heaven in African-American Children's Picture Books (a chapter in her book-length study, Brown Gold: Milestones of African American Children's Picture Books, 1845-2002, published in 2004) argues that Zemach also suffered from poor timing: that her book, while flawed, just came out at the wrong time, and, had its publication followed other titles, like Bubber Goes to Heaven, it would not have stirred up such controversy.
Naturally, with all this analysis and background information, I was quite keen to obtain a copy of Jake and Honeybunch Go to Heaven, and see what I thought of it myself. Thankfully, my own library system didn't join the boycott, so I was able to borrow a copy! I have to confess: I have trouble seeing the overt racism here (unconscious racism, such as the uniform skin-tone of the characters, as mentioned in Martin, perhaps), and kept thinking, as I read through: this is what all the fuss was about?!? Is it racist to depict African-Americans enjoying music, or having a barbecue? Don't tell any of my childhood friends, whose families hailed from places like North Carolina, and southward - they'd probably laugh in your face. Is it derogatory and demeaning, as Nancy L. Arnez, the author of the editorial in The Crisis claimed, that the urban landscape from which Jake and Honeybunch ascend to heaven is so "negatively" portrayed? I don't know... did Arnez happen to notice that the town was named "Hard Times?"
As always, when unsure of my own response, and worried that I might be missing something, I showed this book to someone whose opinion I trust, giving no background information, and solicited her view of it. She read it, thought about it, and responded that she liked how God had been depicted. But did you notice anything else about the book?, I wanted to know. What would you say if I told you that some people had described it as racist? I asked. She hesitated... and then replied that she supposed she could see something in that. Oho! I thought... and so? "Well, heaven is all black. That can't be right, can it? Haha! Somehow, I don't think that's what the critics has in mind...
In the end, I found Jake and Honeybunch Go to Heaven fairly benign: a book that, while it might have been flawed, was hardly the harmful or hurtful threat that it was made out to be, some twenty-eight years ago. I didn't love it (somehow, Zemach's style didn't appeal to me, not for ethical reasons, but for aesthetic ones), but I didn't loathe it either. Of course, I'm not African-American myself, and I do understand that emotional responses can vary, depending upon personal experience. I am also fully aware that no work of literature exists in a vacuum, but is read in the larger context of what is going on in the society at large. That is a reality that is highlighted by the very different responses of critics at the time, and scholars like Martin, looking back from a distance. It is also a reality that confirms my growing belief that "humane censorship" - however legitimate its aims - is probably not a good idea... ( )