Braiding Past into Future

David Bowles
12 min readNov 25, 2022

People from communities of color are underrepresented in publishing. Our books make up less than six percent of the titles released each year, and that’s despite a century of fighting against the gatekeepers. The results of this systematic exclusion are clear: we are also elided from the national conversation, starting in elementary school. Those who live in this country are trained by textbooks, libraries, classrooms, TV, cinema to see US life as almost exclusively white. Certainly literary and intellectual life are constructed to make us invisible, and that project is complicit in promoting the racist white hegemony that is even now morphing into white nationalist fascism.

As a Mexican American who writes for both children and adults, I grapple with the consequences of this elision in multiple contexts. One of the most poignant for me is the view of the future that the publishing world has constructed in science fiction — overwhelmingly, the bulk of the corpus projects the existing inequities of white fundamentalist capitalism forward in time, so that our present erasure becomes permanent and neoliberal homogeneity (despite the superficial racial diversity that is sometimes espoused) is decidedly white.

The roots of this inescapable inequity are in the colonial project that violently transformed the Americas. Writer Alberto Chimal, referring to Mexico with words that apply equally to the US, describes the problem well: “This is a country with a history of racism that even predates its formation as an independent nation: 500 years of…

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David Bowles

A Mexican American author & translator from South Texas. Teaches literature & Nahuatl at UTRGV. President of the Texas Institute of Letters.