Story at Heart
People learn from stories, which makes telling them to young people harder than it seems. Childrenās authors Taye Diggs, Francisco JimĆ©nez, and Tim Myers came together to discuss the impact of their work.
āIn the beginningā¦ā thatās where so many stories start. It is also were learning begins.
And since our beginning, humans have used stories to learn, to teach, to captivate, and to create. Our desire to hear storiesāand more than that, to have them told to usāis deeply human, says Department of English senior lecturer Tim Myers, himself the author of 14 childrenās books. It begins in childhood, perhaps even before we know it consciously, and never leaves us.
āThereās nothing quite like a story,ā Myers says. āItās the power of āand then what happened?āā
Itās only in understanding stories in that context that we truly understand the significance of childrenās literature. As Myers says, āchildrenās literature, childrenāitās literally our future.ā
Myers, alongside modern languages professor emiterus and author Francisco JimĆ©nez ā66, joined actor and Frank Sinatra Artist-in-Residence Taye Diggs for a panel on writing for children February 27.
JimĆ©nez is the author of two childrenās books, which, like his autobiographical series, touch upon his childhood as a Mexican immigrant to the United States. Diggs details his experiences as a person of color in his own childhood in āChocolate Meā and āMixed Me.ā In adulthood, they tell stories of their own beginnings.
Myers says the implementation of serious, broader themes within childrenās literature is critical to helping children shape their view of the world. Itās a common misconception that childrenās books are simple texts for simple minds, Myers says. Thereās nothing wrong with simplicity, he addsāit can be wonderful. But the assumption that all childrenās literature is simple is wrong.
JimĆ©nez spoke to the importance of documenting his experience as a child working in the fields. He wanted to see himselfāand the other children and families that shared his experiencesāreflected in literature. He hopes immigrant children and the adults in their lives will be touched by his books.
Myers, noting that Jimenez identifies as āan adult writer who also writes for kids,ā says that JimĆ©nezās purpose is introspective.
āAs a childrenās writer, youāre often writing to a dual audienceābooks are often read to kids by children or parents,ā he says. āItās really clever that youāre also sending a message to teachers [through these stories].ā
For Diggs, whose son inspired āMixed Me,ā guiding children through their identities is about positive representation.
āI want my child to be proud. My childās mixed, and this book talks about being proud of who he is and where he comes from,ā he says.
Senior lecturer in the Department of Communication Katharine Heintz, who facilitated the hour-long conversation, says respecting the experiences of children is āhonoring the idea of being who you are, for who you are, and not for how youāre seen.ā
āWeāre telling them this story: that you are valuable,ā she says. And if we tell the story from the beginning, they may even learn they are.
Senior Lecturer Katharine Heintz (left) led the conversation with Taye Diggs (middle), Francisco JimenƩz (right), and (not pictured) Tim Myers. Photo by Charles Barry