Who knew books could be divided into just two categories?


maryshelley

Here are six books that come highly recommended: the were on the Royal Society shortlist for the Insight Investment Science Book Prize this year. I’ve got two of them, I should probably add some more.

The Most Perfect Thing by Tim Birkhead
The Hunt for Vulcan by Thomas Levenson
Cure by Jo Marchant
The Planet Remade by Oliver Morton
The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee
The Invention of Nature by Andrea Wulf

Notice anything about the range of books and authors?

My first thought was that hey, 5 of the 6 are about biology or the environment. Excellent!

The winner is the book by Andrea Wulf, which raised a curious concern in the mind of an editor at The Guardian — by gosh, 2 of the 6 were written by women. Isn’t that remarkable? As he notes, women haven’t normally been recognized for science writing.

In the previous 10 years, only three out of 60 Royal Society shortlistees were female, with precisely zero women appearing on the shortlist between 2010 and 2013.

An injustice is slowly being corrected, I would say. But that’s not the interpretation Dugdale reaches for, strangely. As Tom Levenson (note: one of runners-up for the prize) notices:

Five days after the award was announced, John Dugdale, the associate media editor of The Guardian, wrote a piece that asked “Why have women finally started winning science book prizes?” You might think: Good question! Women have been writing great science books for a long time now. Why haven’t more of them been recognized?

But that’s not why Dugdale asked the question. According to him, the Royal Society caved to pressure created by the example of another “more female-friendly” prize. His piece suggests that the judges’ taste is shifting from “male” approaches to science writing that emphasize “a problem, a mystery, or an underexplored scientific field,” towards a feminine tendency “to focus on people.”

My jaw dropped at that clumsy attempt to impose a peculiar gender essentialism on science writing. Levenson must be exaggerating. But no, that’s exactly what he said.

So perhaps female science writers are more likely to focus on people, while their male counterparts are more likely to address a problem, a mystery or an underexplored scientific field.

He goes further to somehow divide the attendees at the awards ceremony by sex. Somehow, he thinks there is some significant difference between these books based on the sex of the author, which is just plain weird.

The men on the shortlist introduced books about geo-engineering, eggs, the hunt for a non-existent planet and the history of genes. In contrast, Wulf enthused about her globetrotting genius and Jo Marchant read a passage from her exploration of mind-over-body healing, Cure – the only extract that reached for the messy subjectivity of the first person.

Has he even read these books? There’s just no way to split them into only two categories in a way that neatly segregates the Wulf and Marchant books into a common pigeonhole. Maybe he sensed a magical “estrogen vibe” at the ceremony that then suffused the books. Or maybe I had failed to notice that the authors of books written in the first person, like American Psycho, Fight Club, Moby Dick, All Quiet on the Western Front, Post Office, and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time were all women. The surprising things you can learn from media editors at major newspapers…


Also, don’t miss GrrlScientists scathing takedown of Dugdale.

Comments

  1. says

    GrrlScientist, who was one of the judges, wrote a rebuttal which is well worth a read.

    John Dugdale’s piece is groundless claptrap based on nothing but snide insinuation, more worthy of a tabloid than what’s supposed to be a quality newspaper. As I said in the Grauniad comments:

    Wulf’s life of Humboldt is the first single-subject biography to win the Royal Society’s prize since 1999, while Vince combines her personal quest with portraits of lives affected by the plundering of the planet. So perhaps female science writers are more likely to focus on people, while their male counterparts are more likely to address a problem, a mystery or an underexplored scientific field.

    Given a sample of two, and ignoring the countless men who have also written biographies and such, you make an inference concerning the writings of not one but two entire genders, which you then caveat with a weak-kneed “perhaps.” Looking to up stakes and take a job at the Daily Fail, are we?

  2. says

    Actually, all the books I listed were by male authors. Effeminate male authors, apparently, to have stooped to using the messy subjectivity of the first person, which only someone with lady bits would do.

  3. Rich Woods says

    So perhaps

    So perhaps Dugdale should read the fucking books and find out!

    What an arse.

  4. Mark Dowd says

    Even if his dumb-as-fuck stereotyping was completely, 100% true, why would this be considered a bad thing? The best programming-related book I have ever read is Dreaming in Code, documenting the development cycle of a rather unremarkable OSS project. There is nothing of any technical substance in the entire book, it is all about the human drama surrounding software development (trust me, there is drama).

    But I can’t remember if the author has inny or outy bits. Apparently that’s important, right?

  5. woozy says

    “Dreaming in Code”

    “But I can’t remember if the author has inny or outy bits”

    the author has a first name that is associated with outie bits. So another woman like, F. Scott Fitzgerald or Ernest Hemmingway.

  6. Lady Mondegreen says

    The men on the shortlist

    Introduced books about geo-engineering, eggs, the hunt for a non-existent planet and the history of genes. In contrast, Wulf enthused about her globetrotting genius and Jo Marchant read a passage from her exploration of mind-over-body healing, Cure – the only extract that reached for the messy subjectivity of the first person.

    He doesn’t even get his gender essentialism right! Surely eggs are a girly subject, and globetrotting is for the menz.

    Seriously, no matter what the people at the ceremony had said, he would’ve found some specious way to divide their topics by gender.