Study: Literary Criticism Is Still Overwhelmingly Male
By Zach Schonfeld
Women writers are all over
the best-seller lists, but
literary criticism is still
predominantly a male field.
That’s according to the latest numbers from
the volunteer organization VIDA: Women in the Literary Arts, which works for gender and racial parity in
the literary world. This year’s report covers prestigious publications like The New York Review of Books, which published 227 male reviewers last year but only
54 female reviewers, and The London Review of Books,
which published 146 male critics and 44 women during the same period. The Paris Review “made great strides toward gender parity” in 2013, the report notes,
but then slid and published substantially fewer women than men in 2014.
As The
Guardian points out, those figures are especially striking when you consider that women are
more avid readers than men in the U.K., where some of the biggest offenders are based.
The figures are not all disheartening. Major
magazines like The New Yorker, The Atlantic and Harper’s all showed increases in the number of women published in 2014.
That data are valuable (without VIDA, the
figures would likely go untallied), and the broader awareness even more so. Top editors likely know
gender disparity is an issue, but they’re more likely to pay attention to it when an organization like VIDA
is paying attention to them.
SCHONFELD, Z. Disponível em: www.newsweek.com.
Acesso em: 15 abr. 2015 (adaptado).