I'm guessing they're probably referring to Pippi in the South Seas, the book where she goes on a voyage to visit her father in the Cannibal Islands? I haven't read it since I was a kid, but I wouldn't be surprised in the least if it came off as colonialist stereotyping by today's standards. (But then, so would a lot of books I loved as a kid. Sigh.)
I bet she is (or the books are--she's fictional, I guess). Racism is racism. That doesn't mean that if you like the books, there's something wrong with you. My mother, who has one of the most sophisticated racism-detectors ever given to a human being, loved this one book as a child. It's a French book about this little boy, Macoco ("My coconut"), who lives in Africa. His mother is tall. His father is dark. One day a white man flies down in a wonderful machine and takes Macoco on all sorts of adventures.
Um, yeah... thank god for European colonizers, right? But so she liked the story as a kid. Kids are dumb.
I usually preferred other books by Astrid Lindgren (and believe me, I've read them all ;)) to Pippi, so I don't remember those books as well as the others.
As already mentioned, this probably refers mostly to Pippi in the South Seas. Considering that the books were written in the 1940s, during the second World War (and published in 1949), and that Mrs Lindgren set most of her stories around the turn of the century or early 1910s, 1920s, there are probably quite a few bits which would be considered racist today.
I read all three books in the series... it's probably just the last one where they go on a boat to some native village and play with the children there. *rolls eyes*
People are far to worried about things being racist or not politically correct these days. If you don't get offended - particularly on behalf of others; have you noticed how people often get more offended on behalf of others than themselves when it comes to these matters? - chances are that no one will care. There are things worth getting all het up about, but some old children's books aren't amongst them.
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Um, yeah... thank god for European colonizers, right? But so she liked the story as a kid. Kids are dumb.
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I usually preferred other books by Astrid Lindgren (and believe me, I've read them all ;)) to Pippi, so I don't remember those books as well as the others.
As already mentioned, this probably refers mostly to Pippi in the South Seas.
Considering that the books were written in the 1940s, during the second World War (and published in 1949), and that Mrs Lindgren set most of her stories around the turn of the century or early 1910s, 1920s, there are probably quite a few bits which would be considered racist today.
She's still my favourite writer <3 :)
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My opinion anyhow...
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