The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Author’s name stripped from children’s book award

Laura Ingalls Wilder Award changed over depictions of Native Americans in ‘Little House.’

- By Meagan Flynn

Laura Ingalls Wilder was on the brink of having an award named in her honor, from the Associatio­n for Library Service to Children, when in 1952 a reader complained to the publisher of “Little House on the Prairie” about what the reader found to be a deeply offensive statement about Native Americans.

The reader pointed specifical­ly to the book’s opening chapter, “Going West.” The 1935 tale of the pioneering family seeking unvarnishe­d, unoccupied land opens with a character named Pa, who tells of his desire to go “where the wild animals lived without being afraid.” Where “the land was level, and there were no trees.”

And where “there were no people. Only Indians lived there.”

The editor at Harper’s who received the reader’s complaint wrote back saying it was “unbelievab­le” to her that not a single person at Harper’s ever noticed, for nearly 20 years, that the sentence appeared to imply that Native Americans were not people, according to a 2007 biography of Wilder by Pamela Smith Hill.

Yet Harper’s decision in 1953 to change “people” to “settlers” in the offending sentence did little to quell the critics in later decades, who began describing Wilder’s depictions of Native Americans and some African-Americans — and her storylines evoking white settlers’ manifest-destiny beliefs — as racist.

Now, after years of complaints, the Associatio­n for Library Service to Children, a division of the American Library Associatio­n, says it voted Saturday to strip Wilder’s name from the award.

The decision makes Wilder the latest target of efforts to purge from the cultural landscape symbols that honor historical figures who owned slaves, espoused racist views or engaged in racist prac-

tices. Statues and flags have been removed and highways renamed across the country. Coats of arms and building names have been changed or are the object of protests to get them changed. Columbus Day is now Indigenous Peoples’ Day in some places.

In its decision to remove Wilder’s name from the award, the library associatio­n had cited “anti-Native and antiBlack sentiments in her work” when it announced the review of Wilder’s award in February. The award, reserved for authors or illustrato­rs who have made “significan­t and lasting contributi­on to children’s literature,” will no longer be called the “Laura Ingalls Wilder Award.” It’s now the “Children’s Literature Legacy Award.”

“This decision was made in considerat­ion of the fact that Wilder’s legacy, as represente­d by her body of work, includes expression­s of stereotypi­cal attitudes inconsiste­nt with ALSC’s core values of inclusiven­ess, integrity and respect, and responsive­ness,” the associatio­n said in a statement on its website.

Wilder was the first to win the award in 1954, when she was in her late 80s and nearing the end of her life.

Until her death in 1957 she was beloved for the semi-autobiogra­phical “Little House” children’s books, fictionali­zed versions of her family’s adventures traveling the western frontier in their covered wagon and its encounters with Native Americans.

Born just after the Civil War in 1867 and having lived through both the Panic of 1893 and Great Depression in the 1930s, Wilder once acknowledg­ed that “in my own life I represente­d a whole period of American history.”

But by the same measure, critics say, her family’s intrusion on Native American lands, particular­ly in “Little House on the Prairie,” represente­d a whole period of abuse against tribes across America, justified by white settlers’ belief that Native Americans didn’t count as settlers on their own land.

The book includes multiple statements from characters saying, “The only good Indian is a dead Indian.” In 1998, an 8-year-old girl on the Upper Sioux Reservatio­n was so disturbed after hearing her teacher read the statement aloud in class that she went home crying, leading her mother to unsuccessf­ully petition the school district to ban the book from its curriculum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States