Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-24 Thread Pharos
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 10:59 PM, David Goodman dgge...@gmail.com wrote:
 The argument for Savage was that an exception should be made for
 bibliographies, discographies, and so forth, where we would do better
 to provide complete  coverage since it quite easy to do something
 which can well be crowd-sourced,  fits in with our basic mission,  is
 appropriate  to do in conjunction with articles rather than as some
 sort of separate database. I opposed the Savage material as a separate
 article, would still oppose it today,  but I wouldn't now oppose
 having the material: I think the best way to do this is with subpages.

As an aside, I have played with classifying some of our non-standard
article types (without judging them!) here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Encyclopedic_genre

Thanks,
Richard
(User:Pharos)

 On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 4:30 AM, Thomas Morton
 morton.tho...@googlemail.com wrote:
 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making it
 clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100 sources
 around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga, the most
 followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had other people
 ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F
 . I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should 
 be
 generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither article
 currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


 Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles devoted
 to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main topic
 articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or detailed
 information on specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
 Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

 One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the sources
 cited included information about her only incidentally in the course of
 covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her (presumably
 with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the subject
 or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an argument that might
 apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles discussing his Twitter
 usage are really about Justin Bieber and his behavior, not his Twitter
 account. See for example[1], a short mention in Ashton Kutcher's bio about
 his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most prominent users of that
 service in its history, but there is no article devoted to it. Rather than
 seeing the merge proposal as an example of I don't like it, I think the
 fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a gigantic fanbase to distort
 normal practice on a wiki.


 One of the problems I personally have with those articles is that it
 stretches to definition of Wikipedia as a summary resource. If we aim to be
 exhaustive, in the way those articles represent, where does it end?

 As Nathan says; this is a prime example of POV pushing/distortion.

 If I wrote a lengthy article about the details of messages Dudley Clarke
 sent back and forth to John Bevan during World War II (and article I could
 quite easily source) the community would, quite rightly, delete it.

 Tom

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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-23 Thread David Goodman
The argument for Savage was that an exception should be made for
bibliographies, discographies, and so forth, where we would do better
to provide complete  coverage since it quite easy to do something
which can well be crowd-sourced,  fits in with our basic mission,  is
appropriate  to do in conjunction with articles rather than as some
sort of separate database. I opposed the Savage material as a separate
article, would still oppose it today,  but I wouldn't now oppose
having the material: I think the best way to do this is with subpages.


On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 4:30 AM, Thomas Morton
morton.tho...@googlemail.com wrote:
 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making it
 clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100 sources
 around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga, the most
 followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had other people
 ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F
 . I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should be
 generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither article
 currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


 Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles devoted
 to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main topic
 articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or detailed
 information on specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
 Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

 One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the sources
 cited included information about her only incidentally in the course of
 covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her (presumably
 with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the subject
 or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an argument that might
 apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles discussing his Twitter
 usage are really about Justin Bieber and his behavior, not his Twitter
 account. See for example[1], a short mention in Ashton Kutcher's bio about
 his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most prominent users of that
 service in its history, but there is no article devoted to it. Rather than
 seeing the merge proposal as an example of I don't like it, I think the
 fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a gigantic fanbase to distort
 normal practice on a wiki.


 One of the problems I personally have with those articles is that it
 stretches to definition of Wikipedia as a summary resource. If we aim to be
 exhaustive, in the way those articles represent, where does it end?

 As Nathan says; this is a prime example of POV pushing/distortion.

 If I wrote a lengthy article about the details of messages Dudley Clarke
 sent back and forth to John Bevan during World War II (and article I could
 quite easily source) the community would, quite rightly, delete it.

 Tom

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:DGG
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG

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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-16 Thread Thomas Morton

 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making
 it clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100
 sources around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga,
 the most followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had
 other people ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F.
  I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should
 be generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither
 article currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
 articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


 Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles devoted
 to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main topic
 articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or detailed
 information on specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
 Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

 One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the sources
 cited included information about her only incidentally in the course of
 covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her (presumably
 with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the subject
 or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an argument that might
 apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles discussing his Twitter
 usage are really about Justin Bieber and his behavior, not his Twitter
 account. See for example[1], a short mention in Ashton Kutcher's bio about
 his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most prominent users of that
 service in its history, but there is no article devoted to it. Rather than
 seeing the merge proposal as an example of I don't like it, I think the
 fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a gigantic fanbase to distort
 normal practice on a wiki.


One of the problems I personally have with those articles is that it
stretches to definition of Wikipedia as a summary resource. If we aim to be
exhaustive, in the way those articles represent, where does it end?

As Nathan says; this is a prime example of POV pushing/distortion.

If I wrote a lengthy article about the details of messages Dudley Clarke
sent back and forth to John Bevan during World War II (and article I could
quite easily source) the community would, quite rightly, delete it.

Tom
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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Sarah Stierch

On 5/15/12 11:50 AM, Christine Meyer wrote:

I thought that I'd bring an AfD discussion to the attention of this
list: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Fanny_Imlay#Fanny_Imlay

It really is ridiculous that this discussion is even happening, and is
yet another example of the gender bias on en:Wikipedia.  I've followed
the discussion on the article's talk page, and it goes into absurdity.
  I wouldn't say it there, but how in the world is Imlay not notable
but one of the articles I've been working on lately, [[Anthony
Field]], is?  (I think that Field is notable, but it proves my point,
I think.)  I bring it to your attention because the article needs our
support.


Thanks Christine. The article looks like it was a snow keep which is 
great. I am pretty shocked it was also nominated for deletion. If an 
article like this - a high quality featured article about a notable 
historical figure - is nominated for deletion, then about half of 
Wikipedia should be nominated for deletion because it's boring or 
because the person is so obscure only scholarly folks tend to know who 
the figure is.


Glad it's safe now :)

It's also all the more reason for folks to monitor the AfD queue: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion


-Sarah


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*/Wikimedia Foundation Community Fellow/*
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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Carol Moore DC

On 5/15/2012 12:47 PM, Nathan wrote:
It was a tactical deletion request. I find that to be a pretty silly 
maneuver, personally, particularly as the nominators never do a very 
good job as devil's advocate. If jbmurray didn't think the article 
should be deleted, he should not have wasted his own time and that of 
other volunteers by nominating it.



I've called for speedily archiving the whole silly incident from the 
article talk page. Geez.


CM
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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Ryan Kaldari
Too bad she wasn't nominated for any porn awards, then she would be 
clearly notable.[1] As it stands, she only has 1 biography and a couple 
hundred years of scholarly commentary, so it seems like a borderline 
case to me./sarcasm


1. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability_%28people%29#Pornographic_actors_and_models


Ryan Kaldari


On 5/15/12 8:50 AM, Christine Meyer wrote:

I thought that I'd bring an AfD discussion to the attention of this
list: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Fanny_Imlay#Fanny_Imlay

It really is ridiculous that this discussion is even happening, and is
yet another example of the gender bias on en:Wikipedia.  I've followed
the discussion on the article's talk page, and it goes into absurdity.
  I wouldn't say it there, but how in the world is Imlay not notable
but one of the articles I've been working on lately, [[Anthony
Field]], is?  (I think that Field is notable, but it proves my point,
I think.)  I bring it to your attention because the article needs our
support.

Christine
User:Figureskatingfan

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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Laura Hale
On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 5:08 AM, Daniel and Elizabeth Case 
danc...@frontiernet.net wrote:


 This happened to another article I contributed to that reached FA status,
 as well:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:New_York_State_Route_32/Archive_1#Question

  It really came down to “yes, it’s notable, but it *shouldn’t* be”.


Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
girls) there was an attempt to merge
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making it
clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100 sources
around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga, the most
followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had other people
ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F.
I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff
should
be generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither
article currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
articles.

Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
should not be there.

-- 
twitter: purplepopple
blog: ozziesport.com
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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Nathan
On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Laura Hale la...@fanhistory.com wrote:


 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making it
 clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100 sources
 around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga, the most
 followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had other people
 ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F.
  I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should
 be generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither
 article currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
 articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles devoted
to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main topic
articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or detailed
information on specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the sources
cited included information about her only incidentally in the course of
covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her (presumably
with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the subject
or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an argument that might
apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles discussing his Twitter
usage are really about Justin Bieber and his behavior, not his Twitter
account. See for example[1], a short mention in Ashton Kutcher's bio about
his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most prominent users of that
service in its history, but there is no article devoted to it. Rather than
seeing the merge proposal as an example of I don't like it, I think the
fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a gigantic fanbase to distort
normal practice on a wiki.


~Nathan

[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashton_Kutcher#Twitter_presence
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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Lady of Shalott
I have to say that I think a topic such as Imlay, with literally centuries
of scholarship is not really comparable to the recentism that is an article
on a Twitter account, whether Bieber's or Gaga's.

LadyofShalott/ Aleta Turner

On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:50 PM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:



 On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Laura Hale la...@fanhistory.com wrote:


 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making
 it clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100
 sources around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga,
 the most followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had
 other people ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F.
  I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should
 be generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither
 article currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
 articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


 Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles devoted
 to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main topic
 articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or detailed
 information on specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
 Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

 One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the sources
 cited included information about her only incidentally in the course of
 covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her (presumably
 with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the subject
 or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an argument that might
 apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles discussing his Twitter
 usage are really about Justin Bieber and his behavior, not his Twitter
 account. See for example[1], a short mention in Ashton Kutcher's bio about
 his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most prominent users of that
 service in its history, but there is no article devoted to it. Rather than
 seeing the merge proposal as an example of I don't like it, I think the
 fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a gigantic fanbase to distort
 normal practice on a wiki.


 ~Nathan

 [1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashton_Kutcher#Twitter_presence

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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Laura Hale
From a gender gap perspective of bringing in new female contributors,  I
would argue that Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga are much more important than
Imlay because Gaga and Bieber are of interest to and more accessible to a
greater audience than Imlay's article is. I would further argue that it is
a bit elitist to dismiss the importance of improving such articles like
Bieber and issues around such articles like Bieber while focusing on
narrowly scoped articles that are of limited interest and limited ability
to attract a large female audience. We might have issues of educational
privilege and class amongst participants here that mean we do not
adequately address those outside our own backgrounds.

On Wednesday, May 16, 2012, Lady of Shalott wrote:

 I have to say that I think a topic such as Imlay, with literally centuries
 of scholarship is not really comparable to the recentism that is an article
 on a Twitter account, whether Bieber's or Gaga's.

 LadyofShalott/ Aleta Turner

 On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:50 PM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.comjavascript:_e({}, 
 'cvml', 'nawr...@gmail.com');
  wrote:



 On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Laura Hale 
 la...@fanhistory.comjavascript:_e({}, 'cvml', 'la...@fanhistory.com');
  wrote:


 Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics. Because Justin
 Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked by some people,  (Though I guess
 you could argue this example relates to a topic of interest to many young
 girls) there was an attempt to merge
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal making
 it clear the reason is I don't like this.  The article had about 100
 sources around the time the article was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga,
 the most followed person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had
 other people ask why the article isn't deleted.  See
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F.
  I have another topic I wrote on where the regional women's stuff should
 be generic to all women playing the sport or to the region. If neither
 article currently exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
 articles.

 Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the potential to shape
 greater understanding around issues.  Thus, a battle for what should and
 should not be there.


 Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long articles
 devoted to a Twitter account. What is and isn't broken out from main
 topic articles is often controversial, whether criticism sections or
 detailed information on specifically consequential periods, but an article
 on a Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

 One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that the
 sources cited included information about her only incidentally in the
 course of covering other people, as opposed to being primarily about her
 (presumably with the exception of the biography). I don't know enough about
 the subject or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's an
 argument that might apply to Justin Bieber on Twitter. The articles
 discussing his Twitter usage are really about Justin Bieber and his
 behavior, not his Twitter account. See for example[1], a short mention in
 Ashton Kutcher's bio about his Twitter use. Kutcher is also among the most
 prominent users of that service in its history, but there is no article
 devoted to it. Rather than seeing the merge proposal as an example of I
 don't like it, I think the fact that it failed demonstrates the power of a
 gigantic fanbase to distort normal practice on a wiki.


 ~Nathan

 [1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashton_Kutcher#Twitter_presence

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 from _The Night Life of Trees_, by Bhajju Shyam, Durga Bai, and Ram Singh
 Urveti, Tara Publishing, 2006



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Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread Sarah Stierch

On 5/15/12 6:35 PM, Laura Hale wrote:
From a gender gap perspective of bringing in new female contributors, 
 I would argue that Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga are much more 
important than Imlay because Gaga and Bieber are of interest to and 
more accessible to a greater audience than Imlay's article is. I would 
further argue that it is a bit elitist to dismiss the importance of 
improving such articles like Bieber and issues around such articles 
like Bieber while focusing on narrowly scoped articles that are of 
limited interest and limited ability to attract a large female 
audience. We might have issues of educational privilege and class 
amongst participants here that mean we do not adequately address those 
outside our own backgrounds.




Hi everyone. I don't think anyone is arguing the importance of Justin 
Bieber and Lady Gaga and the attraction that primarily young women have 
towards them. Those articles are also protected, meaning that young 
women who are new to editing most likely wouldn't be able to edit them. 
I also could argue that Lady Gaga could be used to also attract young 
gay boys into editing too. :D  (And Gaga is a good article, needing 
little improvement it seems!)


I believe it's the Twitter account focus that people are a bit confused 
by. I have a feeling a lot of young women aren't going to be interested 
in editing articles about the Twitter habits of their favorite 
celebrities, but more so the life story of those people. Alas, I don't 
have any specific research to back that theory though. I just am saying 
it from my own experience as being having my own celebrity obsessions 
when I was a young kid. I wouldn't quite go as far to say we have 
systemtic bias towards Bieber or Gaga content, either. I think we all 
struggle with trying to maintain articles about lesser known figures - 
whether scientists or sports figures.


But, in the spirit of can o' worms perhaps Twitter articles for 
celebrities are a slippery slope. I have a feeling that if we get Bieber 
Twitter then we get a Bieber's hair article too =)  (technically his 
hair is notable.)


-Sarah



On Wednesday, May 16, 2012, Lady of Shalott wrote:

I have to say that I think a topic such as Imlay, with literally
centuries of scholarship is not really comparable to the recentism
that is an article on a Twitter account, whether Bieber's or Gaga's.

LadyofShalott/ Aleta Turner

On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:50 PM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com
javascript:_e({}, 'cvml', 'nawr...@gmail.com'); wrote:



On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Laura Hale
la...@fanhistory.com javascript:_e({}, 'cvml',
'la...@fanhistory.com'); wrote:


Been there.  Done that.  It isn't only women's topics.
Because Justin Bieber is unpopular and actively disliked
by some people,  (Though I guess you could argue this
example relates to a topic of interest to many young
girls) there was an attempt to merge
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_on_Twitter in
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber , with
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Justin_Bieber#Merger_proposal
making it clear the reason is I don't like this.  The
article had about 100 sources around the time the article
was nominated for merge.  Lady Gaga, the most followed
person on Twitter and woo hoo female to boot! has had
other people ask why the article isn't deleted.  See

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Lady_Gaga_on_Twitter#Request_for_deletion:_Is_this_page_really_relevant.3F
. I have another topic I wrote on where the regional
women's stuff should be generic to all women playing the
sport or to the region. If neither article currently
exist, [[WP:SOFIXIT]] by creating the new and relevant
articles.

Information is power and what is on Wikipedia has the
potential to shape greater understanding around issues. 
Thus, a battle for what should and should not be there.



Wow, YMMV, but I think it's really odd to have whole long
articles devoted to a Twitter account. What is and isn't
broken out from main topic articles is often controversial,
whether criticism sections or detailed information on
specifically consequential periods, but an article on a
Twitter account is an outlier in my reading experience.

One of the arguments on the talk page for Fanny Imlay was that
the sources cited included information about her only
incidentally in the course of covering other people, as
opposed to being primarily about her (presumably with the
exception of the biography). I don't know enough about the
subject or the sources to know if this is the case, but it's
an argument that might 

Re: [Gendergap] Article for deletion Fanny Imlay

2012-05-15 Thread John Vandenberg
On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 9:01 AM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 5/15/12 6:35 PM, Laura Hale wrote:

 From a gender gap perspective of bringing in new female contributors,  I
 would argue that Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga are much more important than
 Imlay because Gaga and Bieber are of interest to and more accessible to a
 greater audience than Imlay's article is. I would further argue that it is a
 bit elitist to dismiss the importance of improving such articles like Bieber
 and issues around such articles like Bieber while focusing on narrowly
 scoped articles that are of limited interest and limited ability to attract
 a large female audience. We might have issues of educational privilege and
 class amongst participants here that mean we do not adequately address those
 outside our own backgrounds.


 Hi everyone. I don't think anyone is arguing the importance of Justin Bieber
 and Lady Gaga and the attraction that primarily young women have towards
 them. Those articles are also protected, meaning that young women who are
 new to editing most likely wouldn't be able to edit them. I also could argue
 that Lady Gaga could be used to also attract young gay boys into editing
 too. :D  (And Gaga is a good article, needing little improvement it seems!)

 I believe it's the Twitter account focus that people are a bit confused by.
 I have a feeling a lot of young women aren't going to be interested in
 editing articles about the Twitter habits of their favorite celebrities, but
 more so the life story of those people. Alas, I don't have any specific
 research to back that theory though. I just am saying it from my own
 experience as being having my own celebrity obsessions when I was a young
 kid. I wouldn't quite go as far to say we have systemtic bias towards Bieber
 or Gaga content, either. I think we all struggle with trying to maintain
 articles about lesser known figures - whether scientists or sports figures.

 But, in the spirit of can o' worms perhaps Twitter articles for
 celebrities are a slippery slope. I have a feeling that if we get Bieber
 Twitter then we get a Bieber's hair article too =)  (technically his hair is
 notable.)

We're way offtopic, but the original problem is solved so ...

Here is an example where I thought a separate article was uncalled for

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Savage_bibliography

The AFD is all but over, and I am shocked that so many people believe
that this author's collections works and media appearances are
separately notable.  IMO Bieber's twitter account and Bieber's hair
are both more distinctly notable than Savage's collection of works.
people talk about Bieber's twitter account and Bieber's hair all the
time; they do not regularly talk about Savage's works as a collective.
 Obviously, mileages vary greatly.

--
John Vandenberg

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