I would love to know more about the damage, and what research has been done
on the negative impacts of bringing awareness to the issues of a lack of
representation of both women as contributors and as subjects of article has
done to the cause of increasing this.  The limited research on this subject
that I have seen suggests that by bringing up this issue, the response has
actually included a large backlash against women by males from since inside
the community and by members of the media.  At the same time, there is a
new body of research emerging that women by being silent in response to
misogynistic  trolling are in some ways rewarding the behavior that awards
the negative performance which further encourages additional harassment of
women.

Indeed, based on observations I have of the community and in talking to
other female contributors, the current environment on Wikipedia for women
is to engage in performance activities that suggest they are male so as to
avoid the type of attention that otherwise retards female participation in
the project, and to otherwise submerge identity, refuse to claim credit for
success and otherwise render this area invisible.  This requirement for
female engagement to be expressly male (either by assuming a male identity,
or by modeling oneself after successful male contributors) would actually
be interesting to research in terms of motivational issues for female
participation on Wikipedia, and the goal of the Wikimedia Foundation in
increasing overall participation on the project.

Sincerely,
Laura Hale

On Saturday, February 22, 2014, Federico Leva (Nemo) <nemow...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Jane Darnell, 22/02/2014 23:23:
>
>> [...]he amount of art in the museum is
>> overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French [...]
>>
>
> The horror! Those Italians, Dutch and French should really be ashamed of
> all the unjust advantage they amassed in centuries of abusive domination of
> the western arts.

More seriously speaking, I have no en.wiki or art competence to judge the
> editorial activity here described, but watch yourself when you use
> expressions which make it /sound/ like advocacy for some sort of
> affirmative action for underrepresented painters, or rationing of arts'
> tastes, or arts export quotas as for milk. You may do damage to your cause.
>

>

-- 
twitter: purplepopple
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