A few weeks ago was the Met Gala, an annual dinner/celebration/whatever-is-the-fancy-word-for-party hosted by the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute.
This year's theme: "China: Through the Looking Glass will primarily examine how Eastward-looking Westerners have understood and misunderstood Chinese culture in an exchange that [curator Andrew] Bolton likens to a complicated game of telephone."
And Rihanna wore this:
Source: Charles Sykes/AP and here.
Putting my love for Rihanna aside for a moment (ARGH, IT'S SO HARD!), this was the boldest statement from the Met Gala, and her message is something that we writers can use when we Write Inclusively. Let me explain.
The "We Need Diverse Books" campaign has been large, encompassing, and necessary. Agents and publishers are actively searching for diversity in their books. But as writers, that may be hard for us. I am of Indian decent: how can I have a main character that is East Asian, African American, a woman, because I don't *really* know how to portray them truthfully? (The funny thing is, we writers of color frequently write white main characters and don't realize the hypocrisy. White people are seen as individuals, while people of color are seen as representatives of their races - they must speak for the entire race, while white characters don't have to do that, making us scared to write characters of color even from our own race.)
But that doesn't mean we should automatically make our characters white, straight, able-bodied, cis-male, etc. That also doesn't mean that we have the same exact character we would have written, but we simply change their skin color. I wish it was that easy, but the Asian, African American, Native, Hispanic, etc. experience is different than the white experience, just as life is different for men, women, transmen, transwomen, and genderqueer people. This is why a simple 'Find and Replace' on skin color won't work.
If we want to Write Inclusively, if we are serious about "We Need Diverse Books," we cannot simply 'Find and Replace' because that erases the unique experiences of underrepresented peoples. The purpose of these campaigns is to represent unheard experiences and reveal them to a larger audience. That can't happen with 'Find and Replace'.
So how do we do this? Well, that's where The Rihanna Solution comes into play.
I'm going to copy-and-paste a whole section from this incredible article because it says everything I need to say. Please please read the full article!
(What's in brackets is what I've added.)
"How to honor a culture that's not yours: The first fundamental of correctly borrowing from another culture [Writing about a different experience than yours -SC] involves admitting your inspiration comes from somewhere else (something missing in the many cornrows incidents). But beyond that, the key is to either take minimal inspiration (Vogue's Chloe Malle suggested "playing with prints and colors from the Ming Dynasty in China, incorporating jade jewelry or wearing colors like red and yellow, according to Fashionista) rather than don a head-to-toe costume. [This happens when writers make their secondary characters people of color, queer people, people w/ disabilities, etc. and not their main characters. It borders on tokenization, but isn't the same. - SC]
Or, better yet, go straight to the source. [Emphasis, mine - SC]
"I found it online," Rihanna told Vanity Fair on Monday's red carpet. "I was researching Chinese couture on the Internet and I found it."
Explaining the dress' provenance to the reporters, she added, "It's Chinese couture and it's made by Guo Pei. It's handmade by one Chinese woman and it took her two years to make." Pei, in fact, has two dresses displayed in the Costume Institute exhibit. Based in Beijing, Pei has been designing for over a quarter-century, dressing Chinese stars like Li Bingbing and Zhang Ziyi, according to Vanity Fair online.
In other words, Rihanna honored China by actually wearing a dress by a Chinese designer based in Beijing.
As Native American fashion researcher and blogger Jessica R. Metcalfe previously discussed with Mic, the best way to honor a culture [or write about a different experience - SC] is working with designers of that culture [reading and researching articles, books, art, opinions, systems of oppression, etc. faced by those people and written by those people - for example, if you are writing about African Americans, do NOT rely on a book about Martin Luther King Jr. written by a non-black person - SC] . Buy from them, or if you're inclined to make your own look, collaborate with them.
And when in doubt, do as Rihanna did and go straight to the source: Google it."
The reason Rihanna's dress was such a big deal was because she was one of the only stars to wear a dress created by a Chinese designer to a Chinese-themed party. Some of the other clothing missed the mark completely: Sarah Jessica Parker, Justin Bieber, Chloe Sevigny. Most of the other celebrities chose to not wear anything Chinese or something minimally Chinese due to the same fears we writers have: we do not want to fall into cultural appropriation. We don't want to misrepresent a culture, and we are scared of the backlash we'd get of our honest intentions. (Read this article as well - it's great.)
So what do we do? We make our secondary characters people of color instead of the main character. With secondary characters, we can get away with not diving into their psyche. It's a form of tokenization of people of color, but we're scared to misrepresent them.
This fear shouldn't stop us. If we are serious about "We Need Diverse Books" and Write Inclusively, we have to deal with this fear and find a solution. We can't ignore the fear - misrepresenting a culture is arguably worse (but not by much) than ignoring the culture completely. The thing is: both are horrific.
Rihanna has given us the solution. Just as she donned a Chinese dress to a Chinese-themed party, if we are writing about, for example, queer people, we must 'don' ourselves in the literature, academia, arts, history, and present-day opinions of queer people. As the others stars learned: We cannot invite ourselves to a party for celebrating Chinese clothing, and then not wear Chinese clothing.
We must go straight to the source. Read books written by the people you are writing about. Read books about the topic you are writing about. Maybe the biggest thing: find crit partners that are of the same identity as the characters you are writing about (but make sure to be polite when asking, and don't expect them to be willing to read - these writers aren't there to beta read everyone's diverse manuscripts, hehe!). Biggest thing: be willing to drastically change your book if they tell you that you have fallen into cultural misrepresentation. You must defer to their experiences. Yes, defer! It is their stories you are telling, and they own their stories.
Writing Inclusively is serious work! But it's important work.
Rihanna is the best. I love her forever. Thank you Rihanna for showing us how it's done!
What are your fears about Writing Inclusively? How have you navigated these fears? We need to talk about these fears or else we won't be able to move forward.
This post is part of the #WriteInclusively campaign. If you'd like to subscribe to a monthly newsletter which will help writers navigate these issues and write more inclusively, please subscribe! I don't spam :D
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