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Lollipop Power

Lollipop Power, Inc. was a nonprofit American independent publisher of children's books. Based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, the group emerged from a culture of lesbian feminist organizing and was founded in 1969. Operating as a publishing collective of a rotating group of around 10 members, the press published non-sexist, non-racist picture books for children to counter depictions of gender-stereotyped roles in mainstream children's books.

Lollipop Power
StatusDefunct; nominal imprint of Carolina Wren Press until c. 2009
Founded1969 (1969)
Defunct1986 (1986)
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationChapel Hill, North Carolina
Publication typesChildren's books
No. of employees10 (1976)

The press grew until 1975, when it got its own office but sales began to plateau. At its peak, the press sold about 1,500 books monthly. A changing publishing landscape contributed to the eventual closure of the press in 1986, when it became a nominal imprint of nearby Carolina Wren Press. The press published some of the earliest picture books with explicitly queer characters, shaping the early history of the field of LGBTQ children's literature.

History

Lollipop Power Inc. emerged from a culture of lesbian feminist organizing and independent publishing in the U.S. state of North Carolina at the end of the 1960s.[1][2] From this context, three publishers and two lesbian feminist journals were established in the 1960s and 1970s in North Carolina, including Lollipop Power which was founded as a nonprofit in 1969 in Chapel Hill.[1][3] Its founding collective included publisher Judy Hogan, who would also found Carolina Wren Press in the state in 1976.[1]

Lollipop Power's mission was to publish children's books with non-sexist and non-racist stories.[4] The publishing collective sought to do this to offer an alternative to the predominantly white and male stories being told in mainstream children's literature, believing that "sex stereotypes can and should be eliminated at a very early age".[5] Members operated the publishers without significant professional publishing experience; stories were accepted both from press members and outside submissions.[5] Lollipop Power members selected illustrators for the books based on illustrations they submitted for sample passages from the texts, with final approval of the books given to the press's board to vote upon.[5] Authors and illustrators were not paid as of 1972, with only the member handling mail distribution of the works receiving financial compensation.[6] By 1976, most of the collective's 10 members (none of whom were the founding members by that time) were able to pay themselves around or slightly above minimum wage.[7]

Kathi Gallagher of the press wrote in 1982 that the founding collective envisioned the publisher as a platform to assist other feminists who desired books without stereotyped gender roles, but orders from other sources like schools, libraries, and bookstores quickly forced the collective to change their model.[2] Its first book, Jenny's Secret Place (1971), was delayed due to lack of funds; once it was published, the company was "swamped with orders".[5] As the company grew into the mid-1970s, it became responsible for all aspects of its publishing process including design, typesetting, and printing.[4] The press reported annual increases in sales through 1975, when its monthly sales averaged 1,500 books.[4][2] That year, the press began to work out of an office with a printer of its own; before that, "chaos reigned. Books were stored under beds, in attics, under ping-pong tables."[8]

After 1976, sales of Lollipop Power books plateaued and then declined as the group began to release fewer works each year (including none in 1978).[9][10] Gallagher wrote that an uptake in less gender-stereotyped works from larger commercial publishers like Macmillan Publishers and McGraw Hill may have contributed to the shift, but so too may have the public perception that the mid-1970s interest in non-sexist, non-racist children's literature was a fad or "one battle that had been irrevocably won".[9] The press ceased operations in 1986, with its titles moved to Hogan's Carolina Wren Press.[11] It published at least one more title, Phyllis Hacken Johnson's The Boy Toy, in 1988 as an imprint of Carolina Wren Press.[12] It was listed as an active imprint as late as 2012, though Carolina Wren Press stopped seeking children's book submissions in 2009.[13]

Legacy

Lollipop Power published Jane Severance's When Megan Went Away (1979) and Lots of Mommies (1983), among the first picture books to depict explicitly queer characters.[14] The publisher also released several other books dealing with gender-nonconforming characters, like Bruce Mack's Jesse's Dream Skirt (1979) and Hacken Johnson's The Boy Toy (1988).[15] Because so few presses in the 1970s and 1980s were publishing children's literature with queer characters, the press shaped the earliest history of LGBTQ children's literature.[14] However, the press's limited distribution meant that its works were not widely available.[16] As of 1979, it was one of just seven independent presses of children's literature in the U.S., and the only one located in the Southeastern United States.[10]

Selected titles

  • Jenny's Secret Place (1970), written by Sara Evans Boyte[5]
  • Martin's Father (1971), written by Margrit Eichler, illustrated by Bev Magennis[17]
  • Exactly Like Me (1972), written and illustrated by Lynn Phillips[12]
  • Joshua's Day (1972), written by Sandra Lucas Surowiecki, illustrated by Patricia Riley Lenthall[18]
  • The Sheep Book (1972), written and illustrated by Carmen Goodyear[19]
  • The Magic Hat (1973), written by Kim Westsmith Chapman, illustrated by Kitty Riley Clark[20]
  • Just Momma and Me (1975), written and illustrated by Christine Engla Eber[21]
  • The Lost Bellybutton (1976), written by Margaret Morganroth Gullette, illustrated by Leslie Udry[22]
  • The Clever Princess (1977), written by Ann Tompert, illustrated by Patricia Riley[23]
  • When Megan Went Away (1979), written by Jane Severance, illustrated by Tea Schook[15]
  • Jesse's Dream Skirt (1979), written by Bruce Mack, illustrated by Marian Buchanan[15]
  • In Christina's Toolbox (1981), written by Dianne Homan, illustrated by Mary Heine[24]
  • Lots of Mommies (1983), written by Jane Severance, illustrated by Jan Jones[15]
  • The Boy Toy (1988), written by Phyllis Hacken Johnson, illustrated by Lena Shiffman[15]

References

  1. ^ a b c Enszer 2015, pp. 44–45.
  2. ^ a b c Gallagher 1982, p. 15.
  3. ^ Miller 2022, p. 37.
  4. ^ a b c Enszer 2015, p. 45.
  5. ^ a b c d e Denton 1971, p. B1.
  6. ^ Sugar 1972, p. 1.
  7. ^ Smentek 1976, p. 2F.
  8. ^ Anton 1981, p. 8E.
  9. ^ a b Gallagher 1982, p. 17.
  10. ^ a b Barber 1979, p. 8.
  11. ^ Enszer 2015, p. 55.
  12. ^ a b Miller 2022, p. 131.
  13. ^ Sambuchino 2012, p. 222.
  14. ^ a b Miller 2022, p. 41.
  15. ^ a b c d e Miller 2022, pp. 216–217.
  16. ^ Naidoo 2012, p. 40.
  17. ^ Naidoo 2012, p. 233.
  18. ^ Bracken & Wigutoff 1979, p. 6.
  19. ^ Bracken & Wigutoff 1979, p. 11.
  20. ^ Bracken & Wigutoff 1979, p. 9.
  21. ^ Engel 1982, p. 151.
  22. ^ Jones 1979, p. 221.
  23. ^ Bracken & Wigutoff 1979, p. 17.
  24. ^ Naidoo 2012, p. 60.

Sources

  • Anton, Denise (August 9, 1981). "Lollipop Power powers publishers". The Chapel Hill News. pp. 1E, 8E. from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Barber, Karen (May 24, 1979). "'Lollipop Power' publishes new kind of children's books". The Summer Tar Heel. p. 8. ISSN 1070-9436. from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Bracken, Jeanne; Wigutoff, Sharon (1979). Books for Today's Children: An Annotated Bibliography of Non-Stereotyped Picture Books (PDF). The Feminist Press. ISBN 0-912670-53-3.
  • Denton, Robin (June 6, 1971). "Lollipop Power! Children's books with a difference". Durham Morning Herald. p. B1. from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Engel, Rosalind E. (1982). "The status of the family in books for young children: A survey of literature written during the 1970s". Child Welfare. 61 (3): 143–152. ISSN 0009-4021. JSTOR 45393881.
  • Enszer, Julie R. (2015). "Night Heron Press and lesbian print culture in North Carolina, 1976–1983". Southern Cultures. 21 (2): 43–56. doi:10.1353/scu.2015.0021. ISSN 1534-1488. JSTOR 26220276. S2CID 141521348.
  • Gallagher, Kathi (1982). "Lollipop Power". Off Our Backs. Vol. 12, no. 6. pp. 15, 17. ISSN 0030-0071. JSTOR 25774468.
  • Jones, H. G. (1979). "North Carolina bibliography, 1977–1978". North Carolina Historical Review. 56 (2): 209–239. ISSN 0029-2494. JSTOR 23534835.
  • Miller, Jennifer (2022). The Transformative Potential of LGBTQ+ Children's Picture Books. University Press of Mississippi. doi:10.14325/mississippi/9781496839992.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4968-4000-4.
  • Naidoo, Jamie Campbell (2012). Rainbow Family Collections: Selecting and Using Children's Books with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Content. Libraries Unlimited. ISBN 9781598849608.
  • Sambuchino, Chuck, ed. (2012). 2013 Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market. Writer's Digest Books. ISBN 978-1-59963-599-6.
  • Smentek, Marian (December 26, 1976). "See Joshua run. Look, Flo, look". The Charlotte Observer. pp. 1F–2F. ISSN 2331-7221. from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Sugar, Harriet (November 29, 1972). "Lollipop: Books stress child liberation". The Daily Tar Heel. p. 1. ISSN 1070-9436. from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.

lollipop, power, nonprofit, american, independent, publisher, children, books, based, chapel, hill, north, carolina, group, emerged, from, culture, lesbian, feminist, organizing, founded, 1969, operating, publishing, collective, rotating, group, around, member. Lollipop Power Inc was a nonprofit American independent publisher of children s books Based in Chapel Hill North Carolina the group emerged from a culture of lesbian feminist organizing and was founded in 1969 Operating as a publishing collective of a rotating group of around 10 members the press published non sexist non racist picture books for children to counter depictions of gender stereotyped roles in mainstream children s books Lollipop PowerStatusDefunct nominal imprint of Carolina Wren Press until c 2009Founded1969 1969 Defunct1986 1986 Country of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationChapel Hill North CarolinaPublication typesChildren s booksNo of employees10 1976 The press grew until 1975 when it got its own office but sales began to plateau At its peak the press sold about 1 500 books monthly A changing publishing landscape contributed to the eventual closure of the press in 1986 when it became a nominal imprint of nearby Carolina Wren Press The press published some of the earliest picture books with explicitly queer characters shaping the early history of the field of LGBTQ children s literature Contents 1 History 2 Legacy 3 Selected titles 4 References 4 1 SourcesHistory EditLollipop Power Inc emerged from a culture of lesbian feminist organizing and independent publishing in the U S state of North Carolina at the end of the 1960s 1 2 From this context three publishers and two lesbian feminist journals were established in the 1960s and 1970s in North Carolina including Lollipop Power which was founded as a nonprofit in 1969 in Chapel Hill 1 3 Its founding collective included publisher Judy Hogan who would also found Carolina Wren Press in the state in 1976 1 Lollipop Power s mission was to publish children s books with non sexist and non racist stories 4 The publishing collective sought to do this to offer an alternative to the predominantly white and male stories being told in mainstream children s literature believing that sex stereotypes can and should be eliminated at a very early age 5 Members operated the publishers without significant professional publishing experience stories were accepted both from press members and outside submissions 5 Lollipop Power members selected illustrators for the books based on illustrations they submitted for sample passages from the texts with final approval of the books given to the press s board to vote upon 5 Authors and illustrators were not paid as of 1972 with only the member handling mail distribution of the works receiving financial compensation 6 By 1976 most of the collective s 10 members none of whom were the founding members by that time were able to pay themselves around or slightly above minimum wage 7 Kathi Gallagher of the press wrote in 1982 that the founding collective envisioned the publisher as a platform to assist other feminists who desired books without stereotyped gender roles but orders from other sources like schools libraries and bookstores quickly forced the collective to change their model 2 Its first book Jenny s Secret Place 1971 was delayed due to lack of funds once it was published the company was swamped with orders 5 As the company grew into the mid 1970s it became responsible for all aspects of its publishing process including design typesetting and printing 4 The press reported annual increases in sales through 1975 when its monthly sales averaged 1 500 books 4 2 That year the press began to work out of an office with a printer of its own before that chaos reigned Books were stored under beds in attics under ping pong tables 8 After 1976 sales of Lollipop Power books plateaued and then declined as the group began to release fewer works each year including none in 1978 9 10 Gallagher wrote that an uptake in less gender stereotyped works from larger commercial publishers like Macmillan Publishers and McGraw Hill may have contributed to the shift but so too may have the public perception that the mid 1970s interest in non sexist non racist children s literature was a fad or one battle that had been irrevocably won 9 The press ceased operations in 1986 with its titles moved to Hogan s Carolina Wren Press 11 It published at least one more title Phyllis Hacken Johnson s The Boy Toy in 1988 as an imprint of Carolina Wren Press 12 It was listed as an active imprint as late as 2012 though Carolina Wren Press stopped seeking children s book submissions in 2009 13 Legacy EditLollipop Power published Jane Severance s When Megan Went Away 1979 and Lots of Mommies 1983 among the first picture books to depict explicitly queer characters 14 The publisher also released several other books dealing with gender nonconforming characters like Bruce Mack s Jesse s Dream Skirt 1979 and Hacken Johnson s The Boy Toy 1988 15 Because so few presses in the 1970s and 1980s were publishing children s literature with queer characters the press shaped the earliest history of LGBTQ children s literature 14 However the press s limited distribution meant that its works were not widely available 16 As of 1979 it was one of just seven independent presses of children s literature in the U S and the only one located in the Southeastern United States 10 Selected titles EditJenny s Secret Place 1970 written by Sara Evans Boyte 5 Martin s Father 1971 written by Margrit Eichler illustrated by Bev Magennis 17 Exactly Like Me 1972 written and illustrated by Lynn Phillips 12 Joshua s Day 1972 written by Sandra Lucas Surowiecki illustrated by Patricia Riley Lenthall 18 The Sheep Book 1972 written and illustrated by Carmen Goodyear 19 The Magic Hat 1973 written by Kim Westsmith Chapman illustrated by Kitty Riley Clark 20 Just Momma and Me 1975 written and illustrated by Christine Engla Eber 21 The Lost Bellybutton 1976 written by Margaret Morganroth Gullette illustrated by Leslie Udry 22 The Clever Princess 1977 written by Ann Tompert illustrated by Patricia Riley 23 When Megan Went Away 1979 written by Jane Severance illustrated by Tea Schook 15 Jesse s Dream Skirt 1979 written by Bruce Mack illustrated by Marian Buchanan 15 In Christina s Toolbox 1981 written by Dianne Homan illustrated by Mary Heine 24 Lots of Mommies 1983 written by Jane Severance illustrated by Jan Jones 15 The Boy Toy 1988 written by Phyllis Hacken Johnson illustrated by Lena Shiffman 15 References Edit a b c Enszer 2015 pp 44 45 a b c Gallagher 1982 p 15 Miller 2022 p 37 a b c Enszer 2015 p 45 a b c d e Denton 1971 p B1 Sugar 1972 p 1 Smentek 1976 p 2F Anton 1981 p 8E a b Gallagher 1982 p 17 a b Barber 1979 p 8 Enszer 2015 p 55 a b Miller 2022 p 131 Sambuchino 2012 p 222 a b Miller 2022 p 41 a b c d e Miller 2022 pp 216 217 Naidoo 2012 p 40 Naidoo 2012 p 233 Bracken amp Wigutoff 1979 p 6 Bracken amp Wigutoff 1979 p 11 Bracken amp Wigutoff 1979 p 9 Engel 1982 p 151 Jones 1979 p 221 Bracken amp Wigutoff 1979 p 17 Naidoo 2012 p 60 Sources Edit Anton Denise August 9 1981 Lollipop Power powers publishers The Chapel Hill News pp 1E 8E Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Barber Karen May 24 1979 Lollipop Power publishes new kind of children s books The Summer Tar Heel p 8 ISSN 1070 9436 Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Bracken Jeanne Wigutoff Sharon 1979 Books for Today s Children An Annotated Bibliography of Non Stereotyped Picture Books PDF The Feminist Press ISBN 0 912670 53 3 Denton Robin June 6 1971 Lollipop Power Children s books with a difference Durham Morning Herald p B1 Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Engel Rosalind E 1982 The status of the family in books for young children A survey of literature written during the 1970s Child Welfare 61 3 143 152 ISSN 0009 4021 JSTOR 45393881 Enszer Julie R 2015 Night Heron Press and lesbian print culture in North Carolina 1976 1983 Southern Cultures 21 2 43 56 doi 10 1353 scu 2015 0021 ISSN 1534 1488 JSTOR 26220276 S2CID 141521348 Gallagher Kathi 1982 Lollipop Power Off Our Backs Vol 12 no 6 pp 15 17 ISSN 0030 0071 JSTOR 25774468 Jones H G 1979 North Carolina bibliography 1977 1978 North Carolina Historical Review 56 2 209 239 ISSN 0029 2494 JSTOR 23534835 Miller Jennifer 2022 The Transformative Potential of LGBTQ Children s Picture Books University Press of Mississippi doi 10 14325 mississippi 9781496839992 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4968 4000 4 Naidoo Jamie Campbell 2012 Rainbow Family Collections Selecting and Using Children s Books with Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer Content Libraries Unlimited ISBN 9781598849608 Sambuchino Chuck ed 2012 2013 Children s Writer s amp Illustrator s Market Writer s Digest Books ISBN 978 1 59963 599 6 Smentek Marian December 26 1976 See Joshua run Look Flo look The Charlotte Observer pp 1F 2F ISSN 2331 7221 Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Sugar Harriet November 29 1972 Lollipop Books stress child liberation The Daily Tar Heel p 1 ISSN 1070 9436 Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lollipop Power amp oldid 1146251110, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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