The following was originally posted on November 9, 2009. It is being reposted as part of our CHICKS ROCK! Summer Retrospective.
I consider myself a feminist, but honestly, gender discrimination
isn't something I think deeply about on a daily basis. I'm not so naïve
as to believe it's a non-issue, just one that I'm not confronted with
too overtly anymore. Turns out, I may need to rethink my position.
I
was one of many people upset by Publishers Weekly's recent announcement
of their "Top Ten Books of 2009." A list that included no female
authors.
Knowing nothing beyond that, my initial
reaction was lukewarm. All things being equal, the odds are strongly
against an all male list occurring by coincidence, but... it could
happen. And they didn't completely ignore women--there were 29 included
in their "Top 100." Still, a low total. As I considered it, the less
lukewarm I became. A little steamed. A lot steamed. Hot.
I
spent several days in dialogue with other women writers, collectively
bent on responding. After all, who else was going to spotlight this
oversight? As articles were written, and the conversation unfolded online, the range of public opinion
stretched far and wide. From the overtly sexist ("Women just can't
write as well as men."), to the inane ("It was a bad year for women
writers."), to the delusional ("We're in a post-gender America. Quality
trumps quotas."), arguments abounded. Few people seemed willing to
accept our critique and move on.
All in all, I observed
more anger directed at the women who were protesting the PW list, than
at the list itself. Many people seem to believe that PW should be
allowed to have their opinion about the best books of the year, without
anyone second-guessing them, yet women writers aren't allowed to
disagree without being pegged as reverse-sexist, or worse, a
special-interest minority group vying for an unearned piece of the
recognition pie.
In the end, does any of it matter? The
PW editors and their sexism--whether intentional or
subconscious--matter very little in the long run. It is just one list,
one moment, one group's opinion. The true value of this experience, for
me, was watching women writers come together to say something important.
It's unfortunate to realize that we still have reason to unite in
protest, but it's good to know that we still can.
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