Laura Ingalls Wilder v. the Librarians
Original article can be found at泭泭泭
Originally published on July 3,泭2018泭By Alice B. Lloyd泭
ALA wont honor Little House on the Prairie author anymore:泭All the more泭reason to read her recent biography.泭
Youve probably read by now that the American Library Association removed Laura Ingalls Wilders name from an award last Monday. The Wilder Award was one theythe worlds oldest assembly of library professionalscreated泭especially泭to honor her in 1954, just three years before she died, in large part because theyd come close but never awarded Wilder a Newbery Medal for Little House on the Prairie and its eight sequels. By then essential to our canonical grasp on frontier history and the making of America as we know it, her books were phenomenally popular. Honoring their authors legacy was an obvious move for the nations librarians.泭
Caroline Fraser, author of Prairie Fires: Laura Ingalls Wilders American Dreams, was on the cusp of winning the Pulitzer for biography last year when the ALA first formed its renaming committee. Their principal question,泭Did泭someone whose characters sometimes traded in racist stereotypes still deserve such celebration? Their decree last week answered, no: Her works reflect dated cultural attitudes toward Indigenous people and people of color that contradict modern acceptance, celebration, and understanding of diverse communities.泭
Fraser wrote, in a Washington Post piece rightly anticipating the ultimate decision, Theres nothing wrong with changing the name of an award. And here, or so she suspected in the piece,泭Wilder泭herself would agree. Id like to think that what would matter to Wilder in this debate would be not the institutionalized glory of an award bearing her name but the needs of children. (Its now the Childrens Literature Legacy Award.)泭
This isnt the first time Wilder has been criticized for racial insensitivity in her works. In the 1950s Wilder consented to have a line rewritten in subsequent editions. Shed originally written: The land was level, and there were no trees . . . there were no people. Only Indians lived there. When a reader complained, Wilder told her publisher, Harper Collins, that shed blundered and never intended to diminish natives humanity. (There were no settlers, the description reads now.) More than a generation later, a child of the泭Wahpetunwan泭Dakota, the same tribe Ma and neighbors despise in the books, came home crying in 1998 when her third-grade teacher read aloud a wartime slur one ancillary character repeats: The only good Indian is a dead Indian. The childs mother made a stink, but her teacher withstood the controversy and, with the ACLU on her side, went on teaching the books. It took 20 more years for the ALA to turn on Wilder.泭
Why now? A writer at Vox who loved the Little House books, but also praised the ALAs decision, invoked intersectionality. Junot Diaz, until recently an irreproachable thought leader in literary circles, has prominently condemned Wilder too. But its possible these critiques werent all that did Wilder in: Renewed attention to her life and legacy could also be to blame.泭
Leading historian of the American West Patricia Limerick, whose book The Legacy of Conquest set off a robust reexamination of the complicated and all-important American story of westward expansion thirty years ago, wonders whether Frasers biography of Wilder elevated controversy and criticism. Theres a way in which, when you call attention to somebody, you might actually do that departed the person a disservice by saying to everybody,泭Look泭over here, look at this interesting person, much more interesting than we realize, said Limerick. It was the combined force of a hypercritical political climate and a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography remind us of her humanity.泭
In the week since the ALAs decision, the director of the Laura Ingalls泭Wilder Home museum泭in Missouriwhere the泭Ingallses泭lived before they took off for the frontiercame forward to condemn the awards renaming. And the Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association published the letter their president sent the ALA earlier this year, urging them not rename the award. No human has a perfect legacy. No human is untarnished, the president Dr. Barbara Mayes泭Bausteds泭letter read. Curricular aids to contextualize racially insensitive passages would be a more inclusive response to the problem of teaching the Little House books in 2018, she argued.泭
In an interview with TWS last week,泭Bausted泭discussed the elements of Laura Ingalls Wilders legacy that the ALA may have overlooked. At their last泭Laurapalooza泭convention, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association held a panel on Wilders contributions to feminism. Whether she saw herself as one or not, she exhibited the traits of a feminist. She is one of a number of strong and, one might say, stubborn female writersat a time when female writers were not strongly heard,泭Bausted泭said. She then looked up and read aloud a complex and possibly revealing proto-feminist passage from These Happy Golden Years, the eighth of nine books: Laura refuses to say the word obey in her wedding vows but assures her泭fiance泭she doesnt care about suffrage. Its a mistake to conflate the book and TV character Laura Ingalls with the author. Laura the book character saw and reflected perspectives of people around her, but deeper study of Wilders own life paints a more complicated picture.泭And,泭From the letters we were able to read between Laura and her daughter, it doesnt appear she held racist attitudes,泭Bausted泭adds.泭
Wilder and her daughter, who helped found the Libertarian party, were on the losing side of political history in their day as well as ours. Mother and daughter泭often泭in ideological sync, they were iconoclastic free-thinkers and outspoken opponents of the New Deal. But Wilders greatest offense against modern sensibilities is less personal. The reality of the world the Little House books depicted in such clear and vivid prose was too cruel for the political tastes of todays librarians.泭
Which is a shame, because it was an honest representation of Wilders worldthe American frontier Westand Wilders world helped make ours. Maybe its better, if we really admire writers, not to have things stirred up around their heritage, Limerick allows. Because to know Wilder as readers of Frasers biography do, We will have to deny ourselves simple-minded appreciation.泭
The same goes for children reading Little House on the Prairie for the first time. Where did we get this notion that children are these are delicate little泭flowers泭and they must be kept in protected containers? Theyre not getting protected containers, Limerick lamented.泭
Frontier children certainly didnt get them, as young readers learn from Wilder. As Limerick notes, Why dont we just trust them to think?泭