{"id":3627,"date":"2006-08-12T11:30:12","date_gmt":"2006-08-12T18:30:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kith.org\/journals\/jed\/2006\/08\/12\/3627.html"},"modified":"2019-07-01T10:13:05","modified_gmt":"2019-07-01T17:13:05","slug":"still-more-on-gender-bias-in-s","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/2006\/08\/12\/still-more-on-gender-bias-in-s\/","title":{"rendered":"Still more on gender bias in sf"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n<p>(Wrote most of this several weeks ago, but I keep putting off posting it.)<\/p>\r\n<p>[In 2019, I updated a couple of broken links in this post, and added a couple of notes. I should especially mention that when I wrote this post in 2006, I was barely aware of nonbinary people; this post is very gender-binary-centric, and doesn\u2019t mention nonbinary people at all. I apologize for that.]<\/p>\r\n<p>[Relatedly: throughout this post, I assumed that it\u2019s possible to reliably guess many people\u2019s genders based on their given names. Here in 2019, I\u2019m much more aware that even given names that are very strongly associated with a particular gender are not always reliable indicators of gender.]<\/p>\r\n<p>We at <cite>Strange Horizons<\/cite> have just about filled up our publishing schedule for 2006, and have started on 2007. Interestingly, even though still only about 33% to 40% of our submissions are by women, in 2006 two-thirds of the stories we\u2019re publishing are by women.<\/p>\r\n<p>I suspect that that two-thirds number is a higher percentage than in any other venue in sf. (The percentage has been going up for us. From 2000 to 2006, the percentages of original stories we\u2019ve published each year that\u2019ve been by women have gone 29%, 45%, 42%, 52%, 52%, 59%, 67%.) (For more info about <cite>SH<\/cite>\u2019s percentages, and the percentages at a bunch of Year\u2019s Bests, see the recently updated last third or so of the <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20101016155238\/http:\/\/www.broaduniverse.org:80\/stats.html\">Broad Universe stats page<\/a>.) And, of course, it\u2019s entirely unintentional\u2014which is to say, like most editors, we don\u2019t <em>consciously<\/em> look at gender in making our decisions.<\/p>\r\n<p>[2019 note: The BU stats page was taken down in 2011; I\u2019ve replaced the link with a link to the last archive.org version of the page.]<\/p>\r\n<lj-cut text=\"This is long, even by my standards.\">\r\n<p>A few weeks ago, for example, we had a meeting in which we decided to accept seven stories. (We usually accept only about one a week, but for various reasons we hadn\u2019t accepted any in a while.) After we\u2019d made the decisions (deciding on each story individually, on its own merits, considering a wide variety of factors, not consciously thinking about author gender at all), just as we were ending the meeting, Karen noticed (and pointed out to Susan and me) that five of the seven stories were by women.<\/p>\r\n<p>This was only a couple of months after I had noticed that all of the fiction winners of our Reader\u2019s Choice survey for 2005 had been stories written by women. At that time, I wrote to Karen and Susan:<\/p>\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<p>You girl editor types must have rigged the vote or something. If this were a <em>real<\/em> science fiction magazine, run by manly men, as all good science fiction magazines should be, then stories by boys would have won, as is right and proper and natural.<\/p>\r\n<\/blockquote>\r\n<p>And I added: \u201cPhooey on girls anyway. [...F]rom now on [I] will insist on buying only stories by boys. Think of it as a kind of \u2018literary affirmative action,\u2019 to make sure that boys have their rightful place in our award system.\u201d<\/p>\r\n<p>(Aside: Many people can\u2019t tell when I\u2019m joking. This email that I\u2019m quoting was an example of Jed making a joke.)<\/p>\r\n<p>Sadly, my clever plan appears to have been foiled. I dunno how it happens; we buy these stories, and then we notice that the majority of them are by women.<\/p>\r\n<p>Which is one of the reasons that I believe other editors when they say that they\u2019re not consciously biased toward stories by men. Almost three years ago, I was on a panel at TorCon about gender bias in sf (sparked by the excellent <a href=\"http:\/\/strangehorizons.com\/non-fiction\/articles\/sf-and-fantasy-in-the-new-millennium-women-publishing-short-fiction\/\">Sue Linville article<\/a> on the subject from 2002); the following (very lightly edited) is what I wrote about it in my <a href=\"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/2003\/09\/07\/torcon-tidbits\/\">con report<\/a> at the time, which still pretty accurately reflects my thoughts on the matter:<\/p>\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<p>[The panel] was interesting, and there was some pretty good discussion, though as usual most of the panelists seemed to feel that there just plain isn\u2019t a problem. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s the Biggest Problem Ever, and I think it\u2019s getting better, but I think too many of the statistics point toward there being an imbalance of some kind, somewhere.<\/p>\r\n<p>I think maybe part of the problem with discussing it is that as soon as you use the term \u201cbias,\u201d it starts to sound like you\u2019re accusing editors of sitting around saying \u201cOh, she\u2019s just a girl, we shouldn\u2019t publish this story even though I like it a lot.\u201d Nobody actually believes that\u2019s what\u2019s happening; but I personally think the numbers indicate that <em>something<\/em> is happening. It\u2019s obvious from talking to editors that there\u2019s no conscious bias, but it\u2019s hard to rule out (or, of course, to confirm) subconscious bias. And of course there are all sorts of factors other than bias that may be contributing to the imbalance (several of which are discussed in the article). I think it\u2019s a question that deserves serious consideration[....]<\/p>\r\n<\/blockquote>\r\n<h4>The slush bomb<\/h4>\r\n<p>Okay, so with all of that as background, onward to the latest incarnation of this discussion.<\/p>\r\n<p>A couple months ago, Charlie Finlay suggested (as a followup to an earlier discussion) that <a href=\"http:\/\/ccfinlay.livejournal.com\/58972.html\">women should submit lots of stories to <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite> on August 18<\/a>, sparking lots of discussion in all sorts of places, including <a href=\"http:\/\/www.chrononaut.org\/log\/archives\/000843.html\">David M\u2019s blog<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.scalzi.com\/whatever\/004295.html\">Scalzi\u2019s blog<\/a>. (Also sparking one of my favorite comment threads ever, a brief <a href=\"http:\/\/ccfinlay.livejournal.com\/58972.html?thread=976476#t976476\">exchange between Leah and Celia<\/a> about The Patriarchy.) I kind of wanted to jump into that discussion, but I never quite put together a coherent response to it.<\/p>\r\n<p>Recently there\u2019s been lots more, such as <a href=\"http:\/\/ccfinlay.livejournal.com\/64815.html\">Ten Days \u2019Til the Bomb<\/a> (from Charlie, with debate from lots of others), and <a href=\"http:\/\/ccfinlay.livejournal.com\/65129.html\">You lost me at punished<\/a> (from Charlie, with lots more debate from lots of others, much of it heated).<\/p>\r\n<p>I think one important point that\u2019s come up recently (as <a href=\"http:\/\/ccfinlay.livejournal.com\/64815.html?thread=1255983#t1255983\">noted by dsnight and Leah<\/a> among others) is that the proponents of this \u201cslush bomb\u201d have a wide variety of reasons for supporting it; for example, some have suggested that the main point, for them, is to get more women to be more willing to submit regularly to <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite>, not just to get women to submit once. I think a lot of the debate over the merits of the idea has been based on the assumption that the main goal of the slush bomb is to determine once and for all whether Gordon and JJA are showing gender bias; given that editorial budgets are limited, I pretty much agree with the people who feel that it will be hard to draw a valid conclusion about bias based on the number of stories Gordon does or doesn\u2019t buy from this set. But if the slush bomb idea will energize and encourage more women to submit sf stories (to <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite> and\/or elsewhere) more often, that seems to me to be a good thing.<\/p>\r\n<p>At any rate, I don\u2019t want to debate the merits of the slush bomb here. But I do want to comment on various other aspects of the issue, mostly in the form of some notes on thinking outside the box. The following topics are independent of each other, not meant to be a linear essay.<\/p>\r\n<h4>Submission percentages<\/h4>\r\n<p>One of the points that often comes up is the question of whether the percentage of published stories by women in a given venue is similar to the percentage of stories submitted to that venue by women. One common line of reasoning is that as long as those two numbers are fairly close to each other, there isn\u2019t a problem; according to that argument, what\u2019s happening is proportional representation, not bias. (For example, John Borneman wrote a <a href=\"http:\/\/brassman.xtra-rant.com\/women_write\/index.htm\">detailed statistical analysis<\/a> that generally supports that argument, though he isn\u2019t taking quite that simple a stance; take a look at his article for details.)<\/p>\r\n<p>I see two potential flaws in that argument:<\/p>\r\n<p>First, as far as I know, nobody but <cite>SH<\/cite> is actually tracking submission percentages by gender in an ongoing way. Gordon did it briefly at <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite> for Sue\u2019s article, but the 25%-of-subs-are-by-women number that he ended up with has been bandied about as solid ongoing fact ever since. It may well still be accurate\u2014the percentage of subs by women at <cite>SH<\/cite> has stayed very steady over the past six years (to the limit of our ability to measure it; it\u2019s possible that there\u2019s been a lot of variation in the 7 to 10% of the subs by authors whose gender is unknown to us). But nobody knows for sure what the submission percentages are like (at any of the print prozines), so claims that representation is proportional don\u2019t seem to be based on much data. (Added much later: it turns out that there is data for <cite>Asimov\u2019s<\/cite>: see <a href=\"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/2006\/09\/03\/asimovs-submission-volumegende\/\">Author gender and Asimov\u2019s<\/a>, which I posted a few weeks after I posted this entry.)<\/p>\r\n<p>Sue\u2019s article contains several other numbers regarding submissions (in the \u201cShort in the Chest\u201d section), but (a) most of them are estimates, and pretty much whenever anyone does an actual count they end up with lower numbers than they had originally estimated; and (b) the ones that aren\u2019t estimates are over short time periods (for example, the <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite> 25% was over a period of less than two weeks, if my understanding of the submission volume there is accurate); and (c) there is always uncertainty in the numbers; note that Gordon also said that 4.5% of the submissions were from authors of unknown gender, which means that the actual percentage by women even in the count he did could be as high as nearly 30%.<\/p>\r\n<p>And second, it seems plausible to me (though I have only anecdotal evidence) that there\u2019s potential for vicious circles here; if women perceive a magazine as not being a good place for women to get published, they may be less likely to submit there, which lowers the percentage of women submitting, which makes it \u201cokay\u201d for there to be fewer women published, and so on. (The major flaw in my argument here is that it would suggest that <em>more<\/em> women would be submitting to <cite>SH<\/cite> over time, which doesn\u2019t seem to be happening.)<\/p>\r\n<p>At any rate, the proportional-representation argument is to some degree testable: as various people have noted, if that argument is true, and if more women submit to venues with low percentages of subs by women, then the percentage of stories by women published at those venues ought to go up. That\u2019s one reason I like the general idea of Charlie\u2019s suggested plan\u2014but if the main point were specifically related to this proportional-representation thing, then I\u2019d rather see it be an ongoing thing than a one-day event. (Because there generally really is only a limited number of stories a given editor can buy in a given week.) The one-day event is easier to orchestrate and easier to get enthusiasm behind, so I\u2019m not saying you shouldn\u2019t do it; but <em>if<\/em> the proportional-representation argument is valid (and I don\u2019t know if it is), then it seems like more women submitting <em>more regularly<\/em> would be likely to help increase the percentage of women published. So anyone who participates in the slush bomb, I hope you\u2019ll also send more stories later.<\/p>\r\n<p>I\u2019m not saying this is the only solution, of course, nor am I saying that solving the problem is entirely up to female authors. (My main problem with the proportional-representation argument is not the argument itself, but rather the fact that it tends to be used dismissively, to imply that once representation is proportional, then everyone else can wash their hands of the issue and leave it up to the female authors to just submit more.) This is just one factor\/element in a multi-pronged approach.<\/p>\r\n<p>(\u201cPronged.\u201d What a male way of putting it.)<\/p>\r\n<h4>Blinding submissions<\/h4>\r\n<p>Various people have recommended that editors remove names from stories before reading them, to avoid being influenced by the author\u2019s gender.<\/p>\r\n<p>As an editor, I like non-blind submissions, for a variety of reasons. Some of those reasons have to do with \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/2003\/10\/07\/author-points\/\">author points<\/a>\u201d (the idea that I\u2019m more likely to trust an author to know what they\u2019re doing if it\u2019s an author who\u2019s demonstrated in the past that they know what they\u2019re doing, and thus that I shouldn\u2019t dismiss a story out of hand if it\u2019s by an author I trust); my other reasons may be less rational. I can imagine a semi-blind submission system that I might be okay with (such as taking names off subs, but putting some kind of mark on the subs that are from authors we already know we can trust, so we\u2019ll know to give those subs a look even if they seem immediately not right for us), but to me even a modified blind-subs system seems like a lot of work to implement for insufficient payoff. (And I suspect many people would say the modified version I just described would negate the whole point of blind subs.)<\/p>\r\n<p>Still, there\u2019s evidence that a blind-subs system <em>could<\/em> have a substantial effect. For example, jamiam (in comments on <a href=\"http:\/\/sallytuppence.livejournal.com\/25146.html\">Sarah\u2019s entry<\/a> a couple months ago) pointed to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.wisenet-australia.org\/issue54\/sergeant.htm\">Why are there so few women in science?<\/a>, which includes a table of data from 1983 showing that the same scientific paper got higher ratings (from both male and female reviewers) when it had a male name on it than when it had a female name on it. It wouldn\u2019t be such a stretch to imagine that a similar effect could happen in science fiction today, especially \u2019cause various people have noted that Gladwell\u2019s <cite>Blink<\/cite> describes similar but more recent findings, regarding blind auditions in orchestras.<\/p>\r\n<p>So here\u2019s a thought: if you\u2019re a woman, and you want to see whether you\u2019d have a better chance selling your fiction to an sf magazine if you were male, you could consider submitting under a pseudonym. You could use gender-neutral initials, or you could even use a male-gendered fake name. (Similarly, men who are concerned about <cite>SH<\/cite>\u2019s gender bias could try submitting under a nongendered or female name.) If the editor buys the story, you can decide at that point whether to switch to your real name or not for the byline on the final publication.<\/p>\r\n<p>(Note that I make no claim to originality with this idea; cf Tiptree, not to mention several of the great female sf writers who published under gender-ambiguous names.)<\/p>\r\n<p>I personally prefer that authors not do this when submitting to us, primarily because it messes up the statistics I keep about the percentages of male and female authors who submit to us. I think those stats are reasonably valuable, because (again) I think we\u2019re the only prozine in the field that\u2019s actually tracking author gender for submissions on an ongoing basis.<\/p>\r\n<p>(Side note: gender is pretty much the only thing we <em>can<\/em> reasonably reliably guess from the author\u2019s name. It might be interesting to track age or ethnicity, for example, but there\u2019s no way to even halfway reliably guess those things from the data we have available to us. And if a lot of authors start using gender-masking or -reversing pseudonyms, we won\u2019t be able to tell gender either; it\u2019s kind of just a coincidence that the main thing we at <cite>SH<\/cite> have historically been interested in tracking happens to often be obvious given the author\u2019s first name.)<\/p>\r\n<p>But for all I know, some authors do the pseudonym thing already. Also, remember that roughly 7-10% of our submissions are by authors whose genders I don\u2019t know; in fact, we recently bought a story from an author whose gender we didn\u2019t know until after we bought it. (He turned out to be male.) And in some cases, that\u2019s because the author\u2019s byline gives initials rather than a first name.<\/p>\r\n<p>I realize that my suggesting use of pseudonyms is politically problematic in various ways; see, for example, Jenn\u2019s recent <a href=\"http:\/\/www.jennreese.com\/journal\/2006\/07\/10\/wrong-direction\/\">comments about women in MMORPGs disguising their voices<\/a>. It could be argued that the pseudonym thing is again putting responsibility for the issue on the victims of the discrimination. And if the author keeps the male pseudonym for publication, it still leaves those ToCs looking awfully male. So I\u2019m not saying that pseudonyms are the best or the only approach. There are lots of other valid options. But if an individual author (of any gender) wants to personally test how gender-blind submissions would affect them, it\u2019s within their power to do so.<\/p>\r\n<p>(I should mention, though, that people have different reactions to initials. Some people read initials as male; others\u2014probably including some sf editors\u2014tend to read them as female (perhaps because so many female sf authors have used their initials in their bylines); in other cases, certain specific sets of initials may read as gendered to some people.)<\/p>\r\n<p>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;There\u2019s a fine line between saying \u201cThis situation could be improved if only you female authors would change how you do things; it\u2019s your fault that things are the way they are\u201d and saying \u201cFemale authors do have some power in this situation; maybe one useful approach, among others, would be to start with the assumption that the editors aren\u2019t going to change how they do things, and see what you can do within the existing framework to take some control over these matters.\u201d I hope I\u2019m coming down in that second area, but it\u2019s a tough line to walk; I apologize if I\u2019m slipping across it.<\/p>\r\n<h4>Creating tools<\/h4>\r\n<p>I liked <a href=\"http:\/\/www.zalanthas.org\/blogs\/sanvean\/archives\/001053.html\">Cat Rambo\u2019s brief discussion<\/a> of this issue, specifically this bit:<\/p>\r\n<blockquote>\r\n<p>If we want to correct problems, it makes more sense to me to try to change the power structures, to work at becoming editors, slush readers, reviewers, critics. Audre Lord asserted that the master\u2019s tools are not the best weapons for dismantling the master\u2019s house. Let\u2019s create some tools of our own.<\/p>\r\n<\/blockquote>\r\n<p>Sing it, sister!<\/p>\r\n<p>For example, <em>if<\/em> it\u2019s true that there are certain kinds of stories more likely to be written by women than by men and that some editors are more inclined to like one kind than the other kind (and I\u2019m disinclined to believe that\u2019s all true, but it would explain a lot if it is true), then one way to help address the imbalance is to have more editors who like the kinds of stories women are more likely to write.<\/p>\r\n<p>(Aside about that kinds-of-stories thing: either Susan or Karen, I forget which, recently noted that we at <cite>SH<\/cite> often tend to like stories that focus not just on characters, but on relationships among characters. That\u2019s neither necessary nor sufficient for us to like a story (and we haven\u2019t done any statistical analysis of this at all\u2014it\u2019s just a gut feeling); but I do wonder a little whether (a) women are more likely to write such stories than men; and (b) other sf editors are less likely to like such stories than we are.)<\/p>\r\n<p>Note that the idea here is not just to have more <em>female<\/em> editors. (Although that\u2019s also a worthwhile separate goal.) Female editors don\u2019t necessarily buy more stories by women. <cite>F&amp;SF<\/cite> had Kris Rusch as editor for a while, and the percentages of stories by women published in those years weren\u2019t statistically significantly different than the percentages published by Gordon in his first several years (according to the Linville article). <cite>Asimov\u2019s<\/cite> currently has Sheila Williams, and her percentages are about the same as Gardner\u2019s were recently (and lower than Gardner\u2019s were in the early \u201990s). <cite>Sci Fiction<\/cite> had Ellen Datlow, and iIrc her percentages of stories by women weren\u2019t significantly higher than most of the print prozines.<\/p>\r\n<p>So instead, the idea, from my point of view anyway, is to have more editors who are naturally inclined (without conscious bias or intent) to buy stories by women. Regardless of your own gender, do you generally like the stories you read that are by women as much as or more than the ones that you read that are by men? (I\u2019m not talking about conscious choice here; I\u2019m saying, do you find yourself reading a story and liking it and then noticing it was by a woman, over and over again?) If so, have you ever considered editing a magazine? Or a <cite>Year\u2019s Best<\/cite>? Or even publishing a virtual <cite>Year\u2019s Best<\/cite>\u2014an online list of what you would put into a <cite>Year\u2019s Best<\/cite> if you were editing one?<\/p>\r\n<p>It\u2019s not that easy to become an editor, of course. But bringing in more female-author-friendly editors seems to me to be an interesting approach to the issue, one that\u2014in conjunction with other approaches\u2014might be worth contemplating.<\/p>\r\n<p>P.S.: Yeah, I\u2019m very aware of the irony in my (and other men\u2019s) recommending courses of action for women on this issue. Which is why this P.S. is attached to the only section of this entry that directly quotes from a woman\u2019s blog; funny that I didn\u2019t notice until I was basically done with this entry that I was linking mostly to men\u2019s blogs. But women have had a lot of useful and interesting things to say in the discussions on those blogs.<\/p>\r\n<h4>Leaving the genre ghetto<\/h4>\r\n<p>Nick M. had some good comments that I think got a little buried in arguments over his phrasing and over some of his other comments, so I want to resurrect what I saw as one of his central ideas in that discussion:<\/p>\r\n<p>Submit outside the genre.<\/p>\r\n<p>(I realize there was much more to Nick\u2019s comment than that. I\u2019m just focusing on this one bit.)<\/p>\r\n<p>There are lots of non-genre venues that publish fiction (some of which even publish genre or genresque fiction), often for a lot more money than any of the genre magazines can offer. For a start, you might take a look at <a href=\"http:\/\/maryannemohanraj.com\/miscellaneous\/literary-markets\/\">Mary Anne\u2019s literary markets list<\/a>, plus the venues Nick mentioned.<\/p>\r\n<p>I totally understand and sympathize with the argument that there\u2019s a lot more cachet (among people within the genre) in genre publications than in non-genre publications; sf people may think more highly of you for selling to <cite>Asimov\u2019s<\/cite> than to, say, <cite>Playboy<\/cite>, or <cite>Seventeen<\/cite>, or even <cite>Salon<\/cite>. But I\u2019ve seen a lot of writers say they want to be read. Your audience will be far vaster if you sell to one of those slick non-genre magazines than if you sell to even the most prestigious genre magazine. And you\u2019ll probably get a lot more money.<\/p>\r\n<p>But Hannah exactly put her finger on why I don\u2019t follow that advice, in her <a href=\"http:\/\/nihilistic-kid.livejournal.com\/786348.html?thread=9765036#t9765036\">comment on Nick\u2019s entry<\/a>: those of us who\u2019ve been submitting to the genre magazines for a while <em>know the protocols<\/em> (to use Hannah\u2019s apt phrase). As Nick pointed out in response to Hannah, we who submit in the sf world have been properly trained, but only for the way things work in sf. I spend a lot of time telling authors what protocols to follow for submitting sf\u2014but I try to be clear that I\u2019m only talking about sf, and about the short-fiction part of sf at that, because I know very little about how things work outside my own cozy little corner.<\/p>\r\n<p>The story I\u2019ve been working on writing forever has some magical elements in it, but Mary Anne has suggested that those elements can be read as metaphor, and that I really ought to be preparing to send the story out to literary venues in addition to, or maybe even instead of, sf venues. And that\u2019s all well and good, but it\u2019s <em>scary<\/em>! It\u2019s outside my comfort zone!<\/p>\r\n<p>But that doesn\u2019t make it a bad idea.<\/p>\r\n<p>Anyway, I have no idea what the percentages of stories by women and submissions by women are in, say, <cite>Harper\u2019s<\/cite> or the <cite>New Yorker<\/cite>. And there\u2019s something to be said for not just walking away from the sf-focused magazines; for, instead, trying to make them more inclusive and more welcoming to people who\u2019ve been traditionally underrepresented in sf. We loves our genre, yes we do, and we doesn\u2019t want to abandon it. (I\u2019m not suggesting that Nick or anyone else actually said to do that per se.) Still, in addition to other options, I think it\u2019s worth taking a look at some of the other venues out there that might be more inviting, and that might be more rewarding in a variety of ways.<\/p>\r\n<h4 id=\"editors\">Pushing our editorial boundaries<\/h4>\r\n<p>There\u2019s something that I think I don\u2019t say often or clearly enough when this debate comes up: I honestly believe that editors <em>should<\/em> buy stories that match their tastes.<\/p>\r\n<p>I have noted before that I don\u2019t think it\u2019s a good idea for editors to buy stories that they don\u2019t like just because they think that the stories are probably good stories of their kind and readers might like them. The main problem I have with editors doing that is that it\u2019s awfully hard to judge the quality of a work in an area that you don\u2019t like and aren\u2019t familiar with. You\u2019re likely to be unaware of the conventions and protocols and references, to not know what\u2019s been done before and what\u2019s new, and so on.<\/p>\r\n<p>However: I think that in some cases, it\u2019s a good idea for editors to try to push their own boundaries a little bit, to stretch their comfort zones, to educate themselves about areas they\u2019re not so familiar with.<\/p>\r\n<p>I confess I\u2019m not all that concerned about the percentage of stories by women that <cite>SH<\/cite> is publishing right now. If the rest of the field weren\u2019t heavily tilted toward stories by men, I might be more concerned; and if we were finding ourselves at, say, 80% instead of 67%, for a period of a couple of years, then I might be more concerned. But for now\u2014and I apologize to the male authors who submit to us for saying this\u2014the gender-balance issue isn\u2019t one that I think we at <cite>SH<\/cite> need to worry much about for our magazine. (I really hope that this paragraph doesn\u2019t turn out to be the only thing that y\u2019all glom onto to discuss. I consider this paragraph to be a minor side note on the way to something more interesting; I\u2019m hoping you will too.)<\/p>\r\n<p>However, I do fret about other areas, such as the number of stories by authors of color and\/or about characters of color that we publish. All three of us <cite>SH<\/cite> editors are white Americans, with a background in Western storytelling styles; every time we turn down a story from India, or Africa, or Russia, I worry that we\u2019re just blind to its virtues, that there are entire approaches to Story that we don\u2019t even recognize as valid. And approaches to language, too; I gather (for example) that Indian English features some significant differences from, say, American English, but I\u2019m not familiar enough with those differences to be able to recognize them.<\/p>\r\n<p>So I\u2019m hoping to try to stretch my own boundaries a little. It\u2019s hard; I\u2019m lazy. But there are things I can do without even leaving my house. For example, I have three of Nalo\u2019s anthologies (<cite>Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root<\/cite>, <cite>Mojo: Conjure Stories<\/cite>, and <cite>So Long Been Dreaming<\/cite>), and I haven\u2019t yet read most of the stories in those; they would obviously be a good place to start. I have read all the stories in both of Sheree Thomas\u2019s <cite>Dark Matter<\/cite> volumes, and those have helped, but I still have a ways to go in this stuff. I\u2019m certainly not saying that reading these volumes will automatically give me a full understanding of all cultures different from my own (or even of the cultures represented by authors or characters in those books); I\u2019m just saying that by straying a little outside my comfort zone, I may be able to begin to have a greater appreciation for other stuff that\u2019s outside my comfort zone.<\/p>\r\n<p>So, similarly, I think other editors can\u2014if they want to\u2014try to learn what there is to like in stuff that\u2019s different from what they normally like. I\u2019m not saying they should radically change their tastes, and I\u2019m definitely not saying they should buy things they don\u2019t like; I\u2019m just saying that exposure can help stretch one\u2019s personal boundaries, slowly, over time.<\/p>\r\n<h4>Conclusion<\/h4>\r\n<p>I think it\u2019s unfortunate that more stories by women don\u2019t appear in most of the major sf magazines, and I\u2019d like to see that change (although not, of course, by the editors starting to publish stuff they don\u2019t actually like). I think the submissions bomb will be, at the very least, an interesting experiment; I\u2019m looking forward to seeing what happens.<\/p>\r\n<p>But at the same time, I think it\u2019s very much worth looking at this stuff from other angles too. (In addition to, not instead of. Both\/and!) What other ways might there be to try to address some of the underlying problems and issues? Would helping more girls stay interested in math and science classes help? What about bringing more female readers to sf? What about increasing the variety and quality of the portrayals of female characters in the fiction? What about becoming a member of, and\/or volunteering for, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.broaduniverse.org\/\">Broad Universe<\/a>?<\/p>\r\n<p>What I\u2019m saying, there\u2019s no need to pick just one approach. Let\u2019s work on this from all sides, come at it (to steal from Nick again) from every direction at once.<\/p>\r\n<\/lj-cut>\r\n\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>We at <cite>Strange Horizons<\/cite> have just about filled up our publishing schedule for 2006, and have started on 2007.  Interestingly, even though still only about 33% to 40% of our submissions are by women, in 2006 two-thirds of the stories we&#8217;re publishing are by women.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[119,47,27,26],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3627","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-favorite-entries","category-gender","category-speculative-fiction","category-strange-horizons"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3627","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3627"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3627\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":18005,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3627\/revisions\/18005"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3627"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3627"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kith.org\/jed\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3627"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}