via reddit.com
The fact that she’s a woman
Her husband’s job
Her child-care arrangements
How she nurtures her underlings
How she was taken aback by the competitiveness in her field
How she’s such a role model for other women
How she’s the “first woman to…”
Okay, one quote, and then you absolutely have to read the whole thing.
Still, the virtue of some rules in Aschwanden’s test is difficult to see at first. Take the rule of “no firsts.” In the comments section below her post for Last Word on Nothing, Finkbeiner explained that no sooner had she taken the vow to ignore gender, than she caught herself writing that the astronomer she was profiling was the first to win a certain award. After a reader urged her to stick to her pledge, she removed it.
“The fact that she’s the first woman to do that says a lot more about the prize-giving committee than it does about her,” Finkbeiner explained in our interview. “So if I were going to put that into a story, it would be a story about prejudice in that prize committee.”
It blew my mind, because she’s right. The fact that there’s some many firsts left is the result of bias in the committees NOT IN THE WORK WOMEN DO
This would make sense to me except that I can’t understand how a news story could ever actually pass this test, because in order to even test it, we would have to know that it was about a woman… thus the article would automatically break Rule 1 (mention “the fact that she’s a woman”)
hmm, I suppose we could subject it to the test assuming we independently knew the subject’s gender from some other source
(actually, what counts as mentioning the fact that she’s a woman? Does it require saying the word “woman”? Does using she/her pronouns count? Can it only pass the test by using gender-neutral pronouns or none?)
(And, oh, does “female scientist” have a different meaning from “woman” for these purposes?)