Posted on 03/20/2005 4:09:26 PM PST by Lorianne
Its time for another round of Whats Wrong with Women? Last months category was science. This month its punditry, sparked by a testy (well, nasty) letter from syndicated columnist and FOX-TV commentator Susan Estrich to Michael Kinsley, the courtly editorial and opinion editor of the Los Angeles Times, pointing out the lack of female talent on his op-ed pages: In nine weeks, only 20 percent of pieces were written by women. Now everybodys jumping in: Feminists Get Hysterical (Heather MacDonald in City Journal) is a typical sentiment.
There ought to be more women on op-ed pages in general. Over time, I intend to make that happen, said Fred Hiatt, editorial page editor of the Washington Post, which counts one woman, Anne Applebaum, among its nineteen pundits; in the first two months of 2005 one in ten op-ed pieces were by women. Take your time, Mr. Hiatt! As Applebaum warns, you dont want to hire untalented women wholl just write about womens issues. Her friends got their bylines by having clear views, knowing their subjects, writing well and learning to ignore the ad hominem attacks that go with the job. And you know how few women meet those lofty criteria! The pool of available people doing opinion writing is still tilted toward men, said New York Times editorial page editor Gail Collins. There are probably fewer women, in the great cosmic scheme of things, who feel comfortable writing very straight opinion stuff, and theyre less comfortable hearing something on the news and batting something out. Come April, the Times will have seven male op-ed columnists, plus Maureen Dowd. Not to worry though, Dowd writes, there are plenty of brilliant women . We just need to find and nurture them.
Oh, nurture my eye. It may be true that more men than women like to bloviate and bat things out, socialization does count for something. So do social rewards: I have seen men advance professionally on levels of aggression, self-promotion and hostility that would have a woman carted off to a loony bin, unless, of course, she happens to be Ann Coulter. But feminine psychology doesnt explain why all five of USA Todays political columnists are male, or why Times eleven columnists are male, down to the four in Arts and Entertainment, or why at Newsweek its one out of six in print and two out of thirteen on the Web. According to Editor and Publisher, the proportion of female syndicated columnists (one in four) hasnt budged since 1999. The tiny universe of political-opinion writers includes plenty of women who hold their own with men, who do not wilt at the prospect of an angry e-mail, who have written cover stories and bestsellers and won prizes, and whose phone numbers are likely already in the Rolodexes of the editors who wonder where the women are. How hard could it be to find Barbara Ehrenreich, who filled in for Thomas Friedman for one month last summer and wrote nine of the best columns the Times has seen in a decade? Or Dahlia Lithwick, legal correspondent for Slate, another Friedman fill-in, who actually possesses a deep grasp of the field she covers, which cannot always be said for John Tierney, who begins his Times column in April? What about Susan Faludi? The Village Voices Sharon Lerner? Debra Dickerson? Wendy Kaminer? The Progressives Ruth Conniff? Laura Flanders? Debbie Nathan? Ruth Rosen, veteran of the LA Times and the San Francisco Chronicle? Our own Patricia Williams and Naomi Klein? Natalie Angier, bestselling author and top New York Times science writer, would be a fabulous op-ed columnist. And, not to be one of those shrinking violets everyones suddenly so down on, What about me? Am I a potted plant?
Youll note Ive mostly named liberals and feminists, Im sure there are good women writers on the right out there, too, and their job prospects are probably a lot rosier. A conservative woman who endlessly attacks feminists, like The New Yorkers Caitlin Flanagan or the Los Angeles Timess departed Norah Vincent or the Boston Globes Cathy Young, what could be hotter than that?
Besides being false and insulting, all this fuss about women not having the cojones for no-holds-barred debate overlooks the fact that, as Deborah Tannen pointed out in the LA Times, there are many ways to write political commentary. Not every male columnist is a fire-breather, an instant expert, a tub-thumper, an obnox. Think of the Washington Posts E.J. Dionne Jr. or USA Todays Walter Shapiro, both mannerly and sweet-natured to a fault. Some columnists use their perch to do crusading reporting, Bob Herberts great strength, to tell stories, to analyze ideas and policies, to ask questions, to skewer received opinion with wit and humor. And then there are the ones who just drone boringly on. Surely there are women capable of that!
That opinion writing is a kind of testosterone-powered food fight is a popular idea in the blogosphere. Male bloggers are always wondering where the women are and why women cant/dont/wont throw bananas. After all, anyone can have a blog, right? In the wake of the Estrich-Kinsley contretemps, the Washington Monthly blogger Kevin Drum mused upon the absence of women bloggers and got a major earful from women bloggers, who are understandably sick of hearing that they dont exist. Im staring you right in the face, Kevin, wrote Avedon Carol (sideshow.me.uk), and even though youve said you read me every day you dont have me on your blogroll. Its things like this that make me tear out my hair when people wonder why women are underrepresented . There are actually lots of women political bloggers out there, spend half an hour reading them and you will never again say women arent as argumentative as men! But what makes a blog visible is links, and male bloggers tend not to link to women (to his credit, Kevin Drum has added nineteen to his blogroll). Perhaps they sense it might interfere with the circle jerk in cyberspace, the endless mutual self-infatuation that is one of the less attractive aspects of the blogging phenom.
Or maybe, like so many op-ed editors, they just dont see women, even when the women are right in front of them.
What a lousy article.
Would have been better if written by a man.
:o)
So according to Katha, now blogging is sexist.
Maybe if she stopped writing for that pinko rag "The Nation" she'd have time to start her own blog, and she'd be more appealing to op-ed page editors who might hire her.
Here we go, another round of quotas.
Nobody has any reason to complain whatsoever. If you wish to be in technology, you may.
Other factors besides your own will and ability - or lack of - are nobody's concern, especially not the government's.
Michael Kinsley? Courtly? Hah. I'm pretty sure Susan Estrich v. Mike Kinsley qualifies as a catfight.
lol good point :)
OK you bloggers. If you're male you can't blog for one week. You ladies, go ahead and write about diversity.
How dare you leave out those who don't know what sex they are..................this week!
Let's hope so, and if not, then what is the reasoning?
What she's REALLY ticked off about is that the male bloggers apparently don't link to women bloggers enough. Nothing is stopping the women bloggers from likewise ignoring male bloggers. They can do a cyber-Lysistrata!
Katha, if the boys won't let you into their clubhouse, build your own. Get Hillary and her millionaire friends to buy a newspaper for you.
The rounds surpass the quota's a million fold.
Are there more women or conservatives contributing to the Los Angeles Times?
Yes, but remember, conservative women don't count as women. :)
Actually...see was the original Invisible Girl.
Yeh - but I like _my_ cover better. :)
What she's missing here is all of the wonderful conservative opinion writers-- she mentions Ann Coulter, but omits Phyllis Schlafly, Michelle Malkin, Kathryn Lopez, Frederica Mathewes-Green, Mona Charen, Maggie Gallagher, Rebecca Hagelin, and I'm just getting warmed up. I could go on and on. The real problem is that liberals are sexist while conservatives value the opinions of any well-informed, analytical person who writes well.
Once again, the problem this person sees isn't really between the sexes in total, the problem is only between the sexes on the liberal side of the political spectrum.
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