Sunday, 25 May 2008

The Final Reckoning: The Guardian


Sorry to anyone who's been coming in looking for THE FINAL RECKONING: I was overtaken by a load of work last week. Here we go, though - I'll do the Guardian first, then the Observer, then the GRAND TOTALS.

First up, a reminder of what the actual gender split of the Guardian readership looks like:


Now let's look at how many letters published on the Guardian letters page between 17th April and 16th May 2008 were written by men, and how many by women:


And expressed as percentages:


Now, I would say that even taking into account possible margins of error (I had a comment a few posts back from a woman called Jamie - but if I'd seen her in the Guardian I would have automatically counted her as a man), there is a lot of discrepancy between the gender split of the Guardian readership and the gender split of Guardian letter-writers who have their letters published.

This doesn't of course, automatically mean that the Guardian letters editor is biased against female correspondents. There are several possible reasons for the discrepancy. Here they are again:

1. Fewer women write letters to the editor in the first place.
This one seems the most likely (especially as the letters editor of the Times Higher Educational supplement said in January that 95%* of the letters written to the publication are by men), but it does open up the field for a load of sub-theories about why this should be the case.

2. Women do write letters to the editor, but only on a narrow range of topics.
These tend to be traditionally 'female' topics like domestic violence, abortion, anorexia and equal rights in the workplace.

3. Women do write letters to the editor, but are less likely to be selected for publication.
Precedence is granted to letters from public figures, who tend to be men. In the absence of a letter from a public figure, precedence is automatically granted to male correspondents because they are - consciously or subconsciously - assumed by the (male) letters editor to have more authority or higher social status.

4. Women do write letters to the editor on a broad range of topics, but are more likely to be selected for publication when they're writing about 'female' issues.
Women are seen to be authorities on typically female topics, but not on topics of more general interest (unless the letter-writer is also a public figure or a senior academic working in the subject area).

**NEW!** 5. Very few women write letters to the editor, but proportionately more of them get their letters published.
The Guardian letters editor, being (we assume) a liberal, left-leaning sort of individual, feels he must represent the views of female readers on the letters page, despite the fact that very few women actually write in. Therefore, he chooses a disproportionately large number of female-authored letters for publication in an attempt to provide at least some sort of balance.

Hopefully before long I'll have an answer to all this.

4 comments:

GreatSheElephant said...

I've previously shared my views on point 1 and you didn't like them.

re point 4 The only letter I've written in the past 30 years was on 'Scottish' oil revenues and it was published.

patroclus said...

Goodness, did I not? I've tried to find them again but couldn't.

Who was your letter on oil revenues to? I wrote a letter to the Economist once about the music industry and the internet, and it wasn't published, but my two letters to the Guardian about girls and computer games were, and two that I wrote to the FT and the Wall Street Journal (about Enron and corporate governance, as far as I remember) were, but they went under my colleague's name.

GreatSheElephant said...

The Standard.

Anonymous said...

yesterday in eid,we had to face a very bad situation in a tram, while we were coming from modern to west croydon.When we got on the tram a man,who was ,i think was a mixture of black and white saw us and started to say bad things about muslims.When we stopped at a station the man got louder .Then he went out and kicked two asian guys.They didn't say anything ,they just walked away.Then he again got on the tram by breaking the glass of the tram ,by punching with his hands.then , my dad,uncle and aunt went to the driver and asked him to call the police.Meanwhile, a white woman called the police.When the man realized that we were calling the police he took his two golf sticks and went away.Then the police came and me,dad and uncle gave our statements.I am Deepita Karim a 13 years old girl tourist who will never forget this hospitality that we got in london.