Home 5 News 5 HarperCollins to remove Chinese character after criticism

HarperCollins to remove Chinese character after criticism

by | Oct 7, 2021 | News

HarperCollins Children’s Books in the UK is to remove a story from David Walliams’ The World’s Worst Children after it was accused of using “harmful stereotypes” in its depiction of a Chinse boy.  The new edition of the book will be published in March 2022 without the story ‘Brian Wong, Who Was Never, Ever Wrong’.  The illustration of Wong is on the left of the cover.

The move by the publisher came after a meeting with the podcaster, activist and writer Georgie Ma, who bills herself ‘@chinesechippygirl’ on Instagram.  She said: “’Wong’ and ‘wrong’ are two words that are commonly used in playgrounds to pick on someone if their surname is Wong. Even just the way Brian has been illustrated. He wears glasses, he looks like a nerd, he’s got small eyes… they’re all harmful stereotypes. The overall character plays on the model minority myth where Chinese people are nerdy, swotty and good at maths, we’re not confrontational and we’re high achievers. It was just really disappointing to read about that. Personally for me, because I have a toddler, I don’t want her being absorbed in these stories where Chinese culture is misrepresented.”

HarperCollins said: “In consultation with our author and illustrator we can confirm that a new story will be written to replace ‘Brian Wong’ in future editions of The World’s Worst Children. The update will be scheduled at the next reprint as part of an ongoing commitment to regularly reviewing content.”

Ma, who is British born Chinese, said she was “grateful” to the publisher for “listening and taking action”, but she urged writers to take great care when using characters from other cultures and communities, to consult with those communities and to use sensitivity readers.

The incident has echoes of the debate over the novel American Dirt in the States when its author, Jeanine Cummins   , was criticized for her depiction of Mexican migrants.  More recently, UK publisher Picador was forced to withdraw Kate Clanchy’s Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me because of its depictions of non-white children.  The book is now being re-written.

Ma added: “I feel there are more stories within [Walliams’] book that need reviewing, but this is just the start… I want this to be a learning for all authors who write stories based on marginalised communities, to do their research and seek guidance such as sensitivity reads. Especially if they are not from that community.

“I think it’s great that authors and illustrators want to do books on different cultures.  But if they’re not from that background, they really need to consult those communities and do their own research to represent them fairly.”

Ma said that there had been an increased in hate crime on the East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) community since the coronavirus pandemic, and a number of high-profile incidents where the ESEA community has been stereotyped or merged into one giant community.  Speaking about her action on Walliams’ book, she added: “I’m not going to get sad or angry about it, I’m going to take action and speak up. I want other people to realise that this story is inappropriate, and it doesn’t represent the ESEA community fairly.”

Recent News

21Nov
The Poetry Pharmacy Opens in London

The Poetry Pharmacy Opens in London

What’s the cure for a broken heart? What about for grief, anxiety or loneliness? For those visiting the Poetry Pharmacy – customers or patients, depending how you see them – it’s these questions that are on their minds. The company’s new London bookshop, on Oxford Street, offers tonics to those sorts of emotional ailments. Calm, […]

21Nov
Microsoft Launches 8080 Books

Microsoft Launches 8080 Books

Microsoft has unveiled 8080 Books, a publishing imprint dedicated to sharing innovative research, ideas, and insights at the crossroads of science, technology, and business. Distributed by Ingram, the nonprofit initiative aims to spotlight emerging and diverse voices in these fields.   The imprint debuted its first title, No Prize for Pessimism by Microsoft’s Deputy CTO […]

20Nov
Avicenna Acquired by Durnell Marketing

Avicenna Acquired by Durnell Marketing

One of the most familiar faces at the Sharjah International Book Fair across the Gulf and the wider Middle East is Bill Kennedy whose Avicenna sales agency has been representing university presses and academic houses since it was founded in 2003   Now Kennedy has announced a succession plan which sees Avicenaa acquired by leading […]

Related Posts

Microsoft Launches 8080 Books

Microsoft Launches 8080 Books

Microsoft has unveiled 8080 Books, a publishing imprint dedicated to sharing innovative research, ideas, and insights at the crossroads of science, technology, and business. Distributed by Ingram, the nonprofit initiative aims to spotlight emerging and diverse voices...

Avicenna Acquired by Durnell Marketing

Avicenna Acquired by Durnell Marketing

One of the most familiar faces at the Sharjah International Book Fair across the Gulf and the wider Middle East is Bill Kennedy whose Avicenna sales agency has been representing university presses and academic houses since it was founded in 2003   Now Kennedy has...

Authors Unite for Indie Bookstores

Authors Unite for Indie Bookstores

In the US authors Ann Patchett and Amor Towles have launched the Book Industry Charitable (Binc) Foundation's end-of-year campaign, I Stand with Book and Comic Stores.  They are joined by fellow bestselling authors, including David Baldacci, Judy Blume, Suzanne...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this

Pin It on Pinterest