dark_administrator: (chromatic yuletide 3)
dark_administrator ([personal profile] dark_administrator) wrote in [community profile] dark_agenda2011-01-02 12:08 pm

Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Challenge Summary & Discussion

Authors have been revealed and [archiveofourown.org profile] yuletide has opened an AO3 collection for New Year's Resolution 2011, thus, marking the end of the main [archiveofourown.org profile] yuletide challenge.

Last year, [community profile] dark_agenda was started as a collective effort to promote representation for chromatic sources and characters in [archiveofourown.org profile] yuletide. This year, with your continued help and support, we extended our effort and sought to provide more resources. Among them included the lists of Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Fandoms & Characters (html version), Chromatic Yuletide Fandom Promotion Posts, Source-Sharing Resources, Chromatic Yuletide Beta Offers, Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Prompts (html version), Critiques & Common Pitfalls and Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Stories & Resources. We amassed:
And our challenge AO3 collection received ~260 submissions!

Thank you for all the participants, beta volunteers, readers, wranglers and passersby who contributed to and supported Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Challenge -- we can not truly thank you all enough!

Of course, our AO3 collection will remain open for New Year's Resolution 2011 submissions and we will continue to collect more fandom meta tags, requests and stories. (For New Year's Resolution 2011, we would love more help in adding requests from Yuletide Complete List of 2010 Prompts to our prompts spreadsheet -- you can use this form or add prompts directly into the spreadsheet, thank you!)

We realized that despite these awesome numbers and achievements there's still much we can to do to increase visibility of chromatic sources and characters. Stories from chromatic sources and/or featuring chromatic characters still only comprised less than 20% of [archiveofourown.org profile] yuletide output and the percentages for stories from African, First Nation, Latin American and South/Southeast/West Asian sources are even depressingly lower (some even non-existent).

With that in mind, how has your experience with Chromatic Yuletide been so far? We'd love to hear your thoughts and feedback! If you participated in Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Challenge:
  • To which challenge components did you commit yourself and how did it go?
  • Did you have specific goals in mind while writing your story? What were they?
  • Do you have any tips and tricks for writing chromatic sources or characters you'd like to share?
  • How were [community profile] dark_agenda helpful for you in achieving your goals? And what do you think [community profile] dark_agenda could do to be more helpful?
  • How effective were the promo posts? Were there some formats that worked better than others?
  • Was the information provided on the beta list sufficient? Are there other categories that we should include for next year?
As readers:
  • What were your expectations for the Chromatic Yuletide 2010 Challenge? And did the challenge meet them?
  • For [archiveofourown.org profile] yuletide stories in general this year, what were some portrayals of chromatic sources and characters that work for you? What didn't? How do you think those latter portrayals could be better?
  • What do you wish to see next year with regards to chromatic source and character representation?
dhobikikutti: earthen diya (Default)

[personal profile] dhobikikutti 2011-01-08 05:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Hi there, I know my co-mod [personal profile] wistfuljane has already replied to you, but I just wanted to jump in, in case other people reading this thread had the same question. The name [community profile] dark_agenda is a pun, originating from my first post the yuletide comm last year talking about trying to 'subvert' yuletide by writing only chromatic sources and characters. We are fond of the name because it tongue-in-cheek references the way that efforts to talk about race and representation in fandom often get painted as nefarious and dangerous; it also plays with the whole dark=evil concept that often feeds into racist rhetoric.

In spite of the name, we are not actually holding up brown paper bags to the skins of characters before deciding whether they are acceptable to be written about for our challenge. We include several ethnicities, such as West Asian, Latin@, and Roma, who are often considered 'White' in modern, Anglo discourse. And all of us moderators acknowledge that race, ethnicity, culture, and nationality intersect in very complicated ways, thus making any sort of 'here is where we draw the line' decision process very difficult, and suseptible to criticism.

Thank you for sharing your feedback with us!