Founder of Black British Book Festival calls out publishing industry for lack of diversity

Founder of Black British Book Festival calls out publishing industry for lack of diversity

The ⁢creator of a book festival⁣ dedicated to black authors expressed the necessity to forge ⁤their⁢ own path in the publishing world due to the industry’s lack ‍of‌ diversity.

Selina Brown,⁣ a children’s author who self-published her work, established the Black British Book Festival in 2021⁣ after encountering challenges alongside other ‌black ​writers in establishing and maintaining careers within publishing.

This⁢ unique festival, touted ​as Europe’s sole event of its kind, anticipates ‍drawing around 4,000 attendees at⁣ the Barbican‌ Centre⁤ in London this Saturday. Notable speakers include Grammy-winning rapper Eve, MP ⁤Diane Abbott, journalist Charlene White, and TikTok sensation Big Manny.

In anticipation of the festival, Brown shared with The⁤ Guardian that an increasing number of individuals from marginalized communities are exploring alternative paths into publishing due to‍ traditional avenues being inaccessible.

She emphasized the ⁤challenges faced by aspiring authors⁢ trying to navigate through literary agents as gatekeepers for traditional publishing routes.

View image in fullscreenThe founder of the festival urges publishers to engage readers from marginalized communities. ⁣Photograph: Farinuola Emmanuel

“Hence ⁢we witness ⁢a ‌surge in self-publishing, hybrid​ publishing models, ⁤and creators leveraging social media platforms. It compels individuals to seek unconventional ‍routes when traditional methods prove unattainable,” she⁤ explained.

Brown highlighted Big Manny’s non-traditional journey into publishing as ‌emblematic⁤ of evolving trends. Emmanuel Wallace (Big Manny) published his ⁢debut book “Science ‌is Lit” with Penguin‌ after gaining popularity on TikTok for sharing backyard science experiments with⁣ nearly 2 million⁢ followers now.

‘You can carve your path by deviating from conventional norms,’ Brown asserted. ‘Audiences‌ crave ​content that resonates with them on a‍ personal level.’

Following George Floyd’s tragic murder in 2020, disparities within ⁢British publishing were brought into⁢ sharp focus.

‘Authors like Malorie Blackman and Matt Haig participated⁣ in #Publishingpaidme‌ movement‌ unveiling payment gaps between black and white writers,’ she noted.

However , four years later , Brown stressed that more action was imperative . p >

“ ​People have shared stories where they secured literary representation during George Floyd’s aftermath ​only for it all fade away once things settled down,” she revealed . p >

​ She urged publishers to actively engage readers from marginalized ‍backgrounds . “ ‍This necessitates having diverse marketing‍ teams , PR‍ personnel⁣ , ‍and editors deliberately targeting these audiences,” ‌she ⁢emphasized . p >

⁣Penguin Random House , UK’s‌ premier⁢ publisher , released…

2024⁢ -10 -02T11 :07⁢ :33
Article​ sourced from www.theguardian.com

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