james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2020-08-01 09:59 am
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In light of experiences at this WorldCon
In light of experiences at this WorldCon, I am amending my panel requirements: No all-male panels, and at least _two_ panelists who are persons of colour.
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(Anonymous) 2020-08-03 01:14 am (UTC)(link)I'm not a crowd - I wrote both of the anonymous comments above, and while my examples were explicitly described as scenarios to imagine, I thought of them because of the pain I've experienced in similar situations, in which someone else has labeled me and made assumptions about who I can represent, instead of waiting until they know me, and until I choose to let them know who I think I'm representative of, and who I'm really not, despite appearances and superficialities.
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(Anonymous) 2020-08-03 08:26 am (UTC)(link)I am trying to take you in good faith and I take your point, these things are fluid, but I actually think it is a great step on James' part to say, ok, I am not willing to be part of this panel unless representatives unlike me are also present (for lack of a better way of phrasing it). To return to the race example, even if someone has a "more ambiguous appearance" and "tires of having people assume that they have had a life experience as a POC"... like, I feel like someone with a more ambiguous appearance could have experienced racism, which might consciously or not have prevented them a slot to speak to an audience.
Basically I am not seeing how James' decision really has a downside, without him specifically asking each panelist how they identify, which I think you'd agree is the worse option all told. What steps would you prefer James to take?
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(Anonymous) 2020-08-04 04:34 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
No one inviting you to be on a panel is functioning as your friend.
"Until someone knows me and I chose to let them know" can't apply to panel selection. They don't know and don't have time to find out (and probably should not know) anything private, including your private construction of identity. Panel selection necessarily runs on public identity, whatever that might be.
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(Anonymous) 2020-08-03 11:34 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
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(Anonymous) 2020-08-04 04:22 pm (UTC)(link)For example, I'm talking about someone who, due to their appearance, is assumed by James to be a woman. But this person doesn't identify as a woman. This person doesn't want to be treated like a representative of women. Maybe you disagree, but I think this particular individual person's gender shouldn't be anyone elses' concern, since this person just wants to be on the panel, without being labeled. But, if the circumstances are as I described in a previous comment, James' public requirements will label that person.
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If you have a specific concern that you'd like James to take into consideration, you really should contact James directly. Because these hypotheticals you've brought up aren't really resolveable to anyone's satisfaction.
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