Why Weren’t Any Women Invited To Publishers Weekly’s Weenie Roast? A Press Release from WILLA
For
Immediate Release
November 2, 2009
Why Weren’t Any Women Invited
To
Publishers Weekly’s Weenie Roast?
Publishers Weekly recently announced their Best Books Of 2009 list. Of their top ten, chosen by
editorial staff, no books written by women were included. Quoted in The Huffington Post, PW
confidently admitted that
they're “not the most politically correct" choices. This statement comes in a year in
which new books appeared by writers such as Lorrie Moore, Margaret Atwood, Alice Munro, Mavis Gallant, Rita Dove, Heather McHugh and
Alicia Ostriker.
“The
absence made me nearly speechless,” said writer Cate Marvin, cofounder of the newly launched
national literary organization WILLA (Women In Letters And Literary Arts), which, since
August, has attracted close
to 5400 members on their Facebook web page, including many major and emerging women writers. “It continues
to surprise me that literary
editors are so comfortable with their bias toward male writing, despite the great and
obvious contributions that women authors make to our contemporary literary culture.”
WILLA’s other cofounder, Erin Belieu,
Director Of The Creative Writing Program at Florida State University, asked, “So is the flipside here that including
women authors on the list would just have been an empty, politically correct gesture? When
PW’s editors tell us they’re
not worried about ‘political correctness,’ that’s code for ‘your concerns as a feminist aren’t legitimate.’ They know they’re being blatantly sexist,
but it looks like they feel good about that. I, on the other hand, have heard from a whole lot of people—-writers and readers--who
don’t feel good about it at all.”
PW also did a Top 100 list and, of the authors included, only 29 were women. The WILLA Advisory Board is in the process of putting together a list titled “Great Books Published By Women In 2009.” This will be posted to the organization’s Facebook page and website. A WILLA Wiki has also been started for people to share their nominations for Great Books By Women in 2009. Press release to follow.
WILLA was founded to bring increased
attention to women’s literary accomplishments and to question the American literary
establishment’s historical
slow-footedness in recognizing and rewarding women writer’s achievements. WILLA is about to launch their
website and is in the process
of planning their first national conference to be held next year.
(Note: until recently, WILLA went under
the acronym WILA, with one
“L.” If you’re interested in the organization, please Google WILA with one “L” to see background on
how this group was originally formed.)
For more information contact:
Erin Belieu ebelieu@fsu.edu
Cate Marvin catemarvin@gmail.com
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Faye said:
Disgusting.
November 3, 2009 7:32 PM