Cris Beam's Blog

February 25, 2014

Better Late than...

So I was actually blogging elsewhere...and it struck me I should add the post to my own meagre pileup here. The Nieman Foundation at Harvard (The Nieman Storyboard) asked me to weigh in on the whole Grantland debacle, and to whip up some guidelines for covering trans topics. The Trans Media Watch has already done the latter and I directed them there, but I had some thoughts on the Essay Anne vanderbilt story specifically. That post is below--but overall, the Storyboard, did a great job compiling thoughts and ideas about moving forward. Read that here Dr. V


New (Wednesday, 5 p.m.): We asked Cris Beam, who teaches writing at Columbia University and is the author of books including Transparent: Love, Family, and Living the T with Transgender Teenagers and To the End of June: The Intimate Life of American Foster Care, for a few guidelines on writing about transgender issues. She recommended this checklist from Trans Media Watch. (Rule No. 3: “Avoid sensationalist reference to transgender persons or issues especially where their gender history has no direct bearing on the subject at hand. As a naturally occurring and well documented human variation, there is no reason for transness to be viewed as sensational per se.”) Beam writes:



When asked to draft some guidelines for writing about trans topics, I immediately thought of the ones writers use for any subject. I think that in general, it’s important to remember that the pursuit of truth isn’t license to be reckless. And while we always should be thinking deeply about the harm we could cause by disclosing facts about someone’s life, we also need to take the extra step to explore the cultural context in which that person is living. Because transpeople face tremendously high levels of discrimination in our culture right now, we need to be extra conscious that our reporting doesn’t add to someone’s trauma or risk, or contribute unnecessarily to negative societal attitudes. The way to do this, I think, is to make sure that every element you report is germane to the story at hand.


This is where I believe Caleb Hannan went wrong: His source asked him to “talk about the science, and not the scientist.” That request may be impossible to honor — if he’s investigating the validity of the scientist’s claims, he may also have to investigate the validity of the scientist’s credentials, and he owed it to her to tell her so. Hannan discovered Vanderbilt fabricated degrees and experience pertaining to the product he was covering. Was this relevant? Yes. He also discovered she was transgender. Was this relevant? No. If Hannan wasn’t sure, this is the point where he should have asked himself the tough moral questions about the pursuit of truth versus reckless harm. After all, “truth” is a slippery idea: Hannan’s truth wasn’t Vanderbilt’s. Hannan called her a man in the piece; by all available evidence, Vanderbilt never identified as such, so in fact he wasn’t reporting the truth at all.


If you’re not sure about what’s truth and what’s endangerment and what’s simply not related, ask your source, ask people in the trans community, ask and ask and ask. There are some excellent guidelines at transmediawatch.org, but in general, you should ALWAYS use the same pronoun and name that your source does. Read up on transgender stereotypes and make sure you don’t fall into them. And then, be flexible. I have a transgender daughter and a trans partner and I write about trans issues and every story is different. I once wrote a story about being a foster mother and my daughter read it before it ran and complained that I didn’t say she was trans. I didn’t think it was relevant to that particular essay, but she thought it was vital — to our relationship, to our history, to her truth. She read my omission as shame. I made a mistake with that piece, and thankfully was able to fix it, before publication. Essay Anne Vanderbilt wasn’t so lucky.


1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 25, 2014 14:01

October 9, 2013

Reading in Northampton, MA on Oct 18

I'll be giving a reading on October 18 at 5 p.m. at the wonderful Broadside Books in Northampton. Please come!


CLick on the link below for more info


Broadside Books Reading

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 09, 2013 09:10

September 1, 2013

August 23, 2013

Podcast with NYTimes Book Review Editor Pamela Paul

This Thursday, I met with Pamela Paul in the Times offices to talk about foster care and my new book. She was great! She's written about foster care for the Times magazine, and she (of course) asked smart, thoughtful questions. You can listen to the podcast of our conversation here.NY Times Book Review podcast

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 23, 2013 21:19

The New York Times wrote a beautiful review of To The End of June

Benoit Denizet Lewis called the book a "triumph of narrative reporting and storytelling." Read the whole review here--or better yet, check out the paper version in the Sunday New York Times Book Review!


 


 


Sunday Book Review

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 23, 2013 21:14

April 3, 2013

January 26, 2013

Join me on Gooddreads This monday, Jan. 28

 


I'll be talking about my novel, I Am J, at 8 p.m. EST. Join the Discussion here:


 


Chat with Author Cris Beam

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 26, 2013 10:55

November 9, 2012

I Am J released in Paperback!

This coming Monday, November 13, I Am J will be released in paperback, and it's GORGEOUS!!!!


You can pick it up at your local bookstore or buy it online (cheaper than the hardcover) now. Hooray! Click here to purchase I Am J


Pi

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 09, 2012 11:29

November 6, 2012

Columbia Faculty Reading this Thursday Night!

I'm giving a reading this Thursday evening at 8:00, with other wonderful Columbia faculty, at 412 Dodge. Please Come!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 06, 2012 14:53

Cris Beam's Blog

Cris Beam
Cris Beam isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Cris Beam's blog with rss.