Re: [Gendergap] Novel by Woman-Notability

2014-07-24 Thread Jodi Schneider
Hi Kathleen,

I suppose you are writing about this revision (or thereabouts):
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=October_(novel)direction=nextoldid=617753940

A notability tag is not a Scarlet A: it is merely a sign that the
notability of the topic hasn't been sufficiently asserted.

The best way to avoid it?

Choose multiple, clear, independent sources.
Check the subject-specific notability guidelines. For books, for instance:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability_(books)

Given a revision with two sources, one from a little-known site called we
love this book, it's unsurprising! Remember that editors come from all
backgrounds and we don't all know as much as/the same things as you!

I've thought a lot about notability, as a researcher, so if you want to
talk more about it, let me know!

-Jodi



On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 7:39 PM, Kathleen McCook klmcc...@gmail.com wrote:

 The reason I asked to discuss here is to ascertain whether or not there
 seems to be a different set of notability standards by gender.

 I encourage students to contribute to Wikipedia.
 But when notability is an editor's decision with so many exceptions...how
 do you encourage?

 Really, I am careful and if a book by a brilliant woman like Zoe Wicomb
 causes notability queries..how, on earth, can this gender gap be addressed?

 Here is Ms. Wicomb's prize announcement at Yale.
 http://windhamcampbell.org/2013/winner/zo%C3%AB-wicomb





 On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 1:11 PM, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 10:03 AM, Daniel and Elizabeth Case 
 danc...@frontiernet.net wrote:



 On what basis in Clive Cussler notable?

 That he’s a regular denizen of the bestseller lists in many countries
 who’s had works adapted into major motion pictures (To be honest, I think
 we should say that “all published works by authors who have their
 paperbacks displayed prominently in the racks near the front of bookstores
 at airports are notable [image: Smile]“).


 Well, I don't know. I had never heard of Cussler before today (don't
 spend a lot of time in airport bookshops), but I did look at a couple of
 his novels' Wikipedia articles, and they didn't indicate significance any
 better than the October article. (One of them had a single, ephemeral
 reference; the other had 7 that seemed pretty thin.)

 I can see how Kathleen would be frustrated by what surely appears from
 her perspective to be a double standard.

 Pete
 [[User:Peteforsyth]]

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Re: [Gendergap] Novel by Woman-Notability

2014-07-24 Thread Jodi Schneider
On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 7:46 PM, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com wrote:


 If you're looking to have the students engage with Wikipedia's systemic
 bias, I think it might be more worthwhile to have them evaluate existing
 deletion debates (and similar discussions) -- rather than having them
 contribute directly to Wikipedia.


That's an interesting idea, Pete! If that sounds like a meaningful
classroom exercise, I'd be happy to get involved.

My dissertation research used deletion debates as a case study -- the
Research Newsletter has a couple of writeups here:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Newsletter/2012/September#cite_ref-11
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Newsletter/2013/May#In_brief

I think it would be easier for them to look at a larger number of cases,
 and observe without having their personal attachment to an article come
 into play, if they read stuff that they haven't been involved in.


Detachment certainly helps!

Another way to look at systemic bias is to connect to current research
about how
- geographic coverage varies
- language editions have different depths and coverage

Happy to talk further if that interests anybody...

-Jodi



 -Pete
 [[User:Peteforsyth]]

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Re: [Gendergap] Novel by Woman-Notability

2014-07-24 Thread Kathleen McCook
She's an African woman. She's won Yale's big prize. She is  notable except
this guy thought she wasn't.The I LOVE THIS book site mean to show she also
had a general appeal.
I see how they expect so much more to justify notability for a woman of
color than a male author of potboilers.
It's discouraging and the gender list even more so.
Thanks for your input. I just don't think the wikipeople feel women count.
They have to show so much more than the men.
Thank you for taking the time.

-K


On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 5:06 PM, Jodi Schneider jschnei...@pobox.com
wrote:

 Hi Kathleen,

 I suppose you are writing about this revision (or thereabouts):

 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=October_(novel)direction=nextoldid=617753940

 A notability tag is not a Scarlet A: it is merely a sign that the
 notability of the topic hasn't been sufficiently asserted.

 The best way to avoid it?

 Choose multiple, clear, independent sources.
 Check the subject-specific notability guidelines. For books, for instance:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability_(books)

 Given a revision with two sources, one from a little-known site called we
 love this book, it's unsurprising! Remember that editors come from all
 backgrounds and we don't all know as much as/the same things as you!

 I've thought a lot about notability, as a researcher, so if you want to
 talk more about it, let me know!

 -Jodi



 On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 7:39 PM, Kathleen McCook klmcc...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 The reason I asked to discuss here is to ascertain whether or not there
 seems to be a different set of notability standards by gender.

 I encourage students to contribute to Wikipedia.
 But when notability is an editor's decision with so many exceptions...how
 do you encourage?

 Really, I am careful and if a book by a brilliant woman like Zoe Wicomb
 causes notability queries..how, on earth, can this gender gap be addressed?

 Here is Ms. Wicomb's prize announcement at Yale.
 http://windhamcampbell.org/2013/winner/zo%C3%AB-wicomb





 On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 1:11 PM, Pete Forsyth petefors...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 10:03 AM, Daniel and Elizabeth Case 
 danc...@frontiernet.net wrote:



 On what basis in Clive Cussler notable?

 That he’s a regular denizen of the bestseller lists in many countries
 who’s had works adapted into major motion pictures (To be honest, I think
 we should say that “all published works by authors who have their
 paperbacks displayed prominently in the racks near the front of bookstores
 at airports are notable [image: Smile]“).


 Well, I don't know. I had never heard of Cussler before today (don't
 spend a lot of time in airport bookshops), but I did look at a couple of
 his novels' Wikipedia articles, and they didn't indicate significance any
 better than the October article. (One of them had a single, ephemeral
 reference; the other had 7 that seemed pretty thin.)

 I can see how Kathleen would be frustrated by what surely appears from
 her perspective to be a double standard.

 Pete
 [[User:Peteforsyth]]

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Re: [Gendergap] Novel by Woman-Notability

2014-07-24 Thread Daniel and Elizabeth Case


She's an African woman. She's won Yale's big prize.
Which, as I’ve noted, wasn’t even mentioned in the article at the time the tag 
was placed.

She is  notable except this guy thought she wasn't.
The placing of the tag doesn’t mean (necessarily) that he doubted her 
notability, as Jodi just pointed out. It means that he didn’t see it asserted, 
and was perhaps trying to goad you to add that to the article.


I see how they expect so much more to justify notability for a woman of color 
than a male author of potboilers.

Well, as I did point out a day or so ago, someone tagged an article on one of 
Cussler’s books with the same tag nine months ago. And it’s still there.

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