boxofdelights: (Default)
boxofdelights ([personal profile] boxofdelights) wrote2012-04-21 07:33 pm

wiscon reading list

(hat tip to [personal profile] wired)

I'm in the middle of Akata Witch. I have Beauty Queens out from the library, because it is on the Tiptree Honors List, though it does not look like my sort of thing. But I am tempted to abandon them both, because The Chaos and Fire and Hemlock both arrived on my doorstep today! Also I should look at all the sex ed books that have been published in the last ten years, because I am moderating this panel:

Let's talk about how we talk about sex with kids -- our own OR other people's. Sex ed has become increasingly politicized and all too often schools wind up catering to their most conservative demographic -- how do we frame these debates and argue forcefully that EVERYONE'S children deserve accurate sex ed? On a more informal level, how, when, and in what level of detail? There are a million books out there for parents about how to talk about sex with their kids, and a million more designed to give to your kids instead of actually talking to them -- are there any that are feminist, explicit enough to include the clitoris in their diagrams, frank about contraception, and sex-positive (...but maybe not TOO positive)?

[I did not write the panel description.]

Are you reading anything for Wiscon?
bibliofile: Fan & papers in a stack (from my own photo) (Default)

[personal profile] bibliofile 2012-04-24 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Getting accurate info out there is key, isn't it? And getting it to stick in kids' heads accurately too, so repetition only helps. (I had decent sex ed in school and still had no clue about timings, later.)