The idea of this post
is to see how women are faring in three areas of cultural endeavour:
writing, popular music, and TV and film. Much more extensive research
would have to be undertaken in each area to get a real picture, but
even at a glance it's easy to see that women haven't achieved parity
in any of these areas of either sales or prestige.
Growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, I absorbed the idea that feminism had already happened, in my childhood. Nothing and no one around me suggested that a husband and children were mandatory, or that working wasn't. By the time I was in my mid-teens, in the early 90s, I had become aware that feminism was still around, and inequality was, too, but I assumed that the latter was left over from before I was born and would soon be gone. Certainly, it would be gone well before I reached middle age.
Growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, I absorbed the idea that feminism had already happened, in my childhood. Nothing and no one around me suggested that a husband and children were mandatory, or that working wasn't. By the time I was in my mid-teens, in the early 90s, I had become aware that feminism was still around, and inequality was, too, but I assumed that the latter was left over from before I was born and would soon be gone. Certainly, it would be gone well before I reached middle age.
As I discovered, growing up, that I had a fondness and talent for writing, I had
no reason to think that it was something men did. Through early adolescence, female writers came my way with
a much greater frequency than male writers. My favourite author of
what are now called “chapter books” was Lois Lowry; my 5th
grade teacher assigned me a novel by Agatha Christie, whereupon I
read almost her complete works; in the 6th grade, a female
friend introduced me to V. C. Andrews; as a young adolescent I adored
Marion Zimmer Bradley's Mists of Avalon, a postcolonial,
feminist, and slash fiction-y retelling of Arthurian legend from the
POV of Morgan Le Fay, and the (also slash fiction-y) vampire novels
of Anne Rice.
Even when I was reading novelizations of sci-fi series, even though I'd encountered the notion that "women didn't write sci fi," I couldn't get away from female writers – like Star Trek novels writer Vonda N. McIntyre and 'V' novels writer A. C. Crispin – an “Ann,” I was surprised and pleased to eventually find out. Later I understood that prior to the 20th century, the female writers who were taken seriously could be enumerated using one hand: Emily Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Emily Dickinson. As frightening a blow as that was, however, there was no reason at all, glancing at the Fiction section in bookstores or libraries, to think that women weren't as successful as men as writers now.
Whatever good or bad can be said about it, it's internet feminism that, by calling attention to things like the underrepresentation of female contributors in the elite literary journals and the lack of good roles for women in Hollywood movies, has made me aware, in the past decade, that even if it seems like there are powerful female celebrities everywhere, all may not be equal. And it's the internet that makes basic research into this area unprecedentedly easy, providing us with information on everything from album sales to prize winners to the names of the writers and directors of TV shows, all just a google away.
Writing
Part 1: Awards
Pulitzer Prize for
Fiction (formerly The Novel), 1917-2014:
1920s: 5/9 (women/total)
1930s: 6/10
1940s: 1/8
1950s: 0/8
1960s: 3/9
1970s: 2/7
1980s: 4/10
1990s: 3/10
2000s: 3/10
2010s: 2/4
31/87=35.6%
1980s-present:
12/34=35.2%
First female PP winner for the Novel, Edith Wharton |
Most recent female Pulitzer winner for Fiction, Donna Tartt |
Man Booker Prize,
1969-2014:
1970s: 5/11
1980s: 3/10
1990s: 2/11
2000s: 4/10
2010-2014: 2/5
Total: 17/48=35.4%
1980s-present:
11/36=30.5%
1940s: 2/10
1950s: 3/10
1960s: 2/8
1970s: 3/10
1980s: 3/10
1990s: 3/10
2000s: 3/10
2010-2014: 3/5
Total: 24/75=32%
1980s-present:
12/35=34.2%
GG Award for English-Language Drama, 1981-2014:
Total: 12/34=35.2%
GG Award for E-L Poetry, 1981-2014:
Total: 16/34=47%
Part 2: Sales
(No. of female authors
out of total no. of authors per decade)
1895: all men
1896: 2/10
1897: 1/10
1898: 2/12
1899: all men
Total: 5/42=11.9%
1900: 2/10
1901: 2/10
1902: 2/10
1903: 3/10
1904: 5/10
1905: 7/11
1906: 4/10
1907: 4/10
1908: 2/10
1909: 2/10
Total: 33/101=32.6%
1910: 7/11
1911: 4/10
1912: 3/10
1913: 3/10
1914: 3/10
1915: 2/10
1916: 5/10
1917: 3/10
1918: 4/10
1919: 4/10
Total: 37/100=37%
1920: 3/10
1921: 5/10
1922: 3/10
1923: 4/10
1924: 3/10
1925: 3/10
1926: 4/10
1927: 4/10
1928: 3/10
1929: 3/10
Total: 35/100=35%
1930: 3/10
1931: 7/10
1932: 3/10
1933: 2/10
1934: 5/10
1935: 3/10
1936: 3/11
1937: 2/10
1938: 4/10
1939: 5/10
Total: 37/101=36.6%
1940: 2/10
1941: 4/10
1942: 5/10
1943: 3/10
1944: 4/10
1945: 3/10
1946: 4/10
1947: 2/10
1948: 4/10
1949: 1/10
Total: 32/100=32%
1950: 4/10
1951: 0/10
1952: 4/10
1953: 1/10
1954: 3/10
1955: 1/10
1956: 4/10
1957: 5/10
1958: 4/10
1959: 1/10
Total: 27/100=27%
1960: 3/10
1961: 0/10
1962: 2/11
1963: 4/10
1964: 1/12
1965: 0/10
1966: 3/10
1967: 2/10
1968: 3/10
1969: 4/10
Total: 21.5/102=22%
1970: 3/10
1971: 1/10
1972: 2/10
1973: 2/10
1974: 1/10
1975: 2/10
1976: 3/10
1977: 3/11
1978: 2/10
1979: 1/10
Total: 20/101=19.8%
1980: 2/12
1981: 2/10
1982: 2/10
1983: 2/10
1984: 3/11
1985: 4/10
1986: 3/11
1987: 2/10
1988: 3/10
1989: 3/10
Total: 26/104=25%
1990: 5/10
1991: 5/10
1992: 5/10
1993: 3/10
1994: 4/10
1995: 3/10
1996: 3/10
1997: 6/10
1998: 6/10
1999: 2/12
Total: 42/102=41%
[Note: 2000 and 2005
Harry Potter novel excluded from this decade; Twilight books
excluded: 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008]
2000: 3/12
2001: 1/12
2002: 4/12
2003: 3/11
2004: 1/12
2005: 5/10
2006: 2/12
2007: 5/12
2008: 4/10
2009: 4/10
Total: 32/10=32%
[Note: Adult Fiction
and Children's Fiction tallied separately as of 2012; but women also
dominated AF with 8/10]
2010: 3/10
2011: 3/11
2012: 8/10
Total: 14/31=45%
The Publishers'
Weekly lists are a bit weird. Seemingly they concentrated on
adult fiction up until the YA boom of the 1990s, with some exceptions
for anomalous runaway bestsellers – like the Eloise children's
books in the 1950s. The Harry Potter books were excluded from the
lists during the 90s; a couple get into the Wikipedia lists in the
2000s, but the Twilight books are excluded (but Meyer's adult fiction
novel is included). The 2012 list above, however, is drawn (as the
Wikipedia reference link reveals) from both the adult fiction and
children's fiction lists, which I guess is how it's going to be for
as long as YA and children's fiction are selling like crazy (or –
which may be more accurate – are the categories that still sell
print copies).
Nevertheless, the rough picture that emerges is this: Jonathan Franzen was talking complete crap when he complained that in America, reading is considered an activity for women, and therefore books “for men” (and, presumably, by men) don't sell. With a sudden jump in numbers at the turn of the 20th century, female novelists hold steady at 30-40% until a bad dip in the 1950s, from which they do not recover until the 1990s. God knows why, but suddenly in the 1990s female authors are at near-parity even without taking J. K. Rowling into account. With Rowling, they are probably at parity. And Rowling changed everything, paving the way for the Twilight series (which paved the way for the 50 Shades of Grey series) and the Hunger Games series. In the 2000s numbers dip down again, but would probably be higher than pre-1950s numbers if all of Rowling's Harry Potter novels plus the Twilight series were included. And in the 2010s, so far women are at near-parity.
But Franzen's vision of
women's petticoats sweeping away serious men's fiction was clearly
always a fantasy. Decade by decade, there have never been as
many novels by female authors among the Top 10 bestsellers as there
have been books by men, and I assume that the Top 10 is roughly
representative of what's going on below. It hasn't been 50/50 –
and, just sticking to the 20th century, often it wasn't
even close. And sure as hell female novelists weren't crowding
male novelists – whether serious or frivolous – out of
the market.
Part 3: Literary
Journals
The London Review of Books and New York Review of Books have already been
called to task by feminists in recent years (as in, 2013) for their
extremely low numbers of female contributors. Did anything change in
2014?
Well, if the numbers from last year are an improvement, they're still a joke. The number of female
contributors per issue in the NYRB didn't once reach as high as one third,
and only three times (out of 18!) reached as high as a quarter. That
would be pretty good, if this were the 18th century. LRB did mildly better: out of the 24 issues in 2014, the number of
female contributors got as high as a third twice and as high as a
quarter six times.
But these offenders pale in comparison to The Paris Review. Check out the dismal gender numbers for their author interviews:
1950s: 3/25=12%
1960s: 5/37=13.5%
1970s: 8/39=20.5%
1980s: 15/75=20%
1990s: 18/88=20.4%
2000s: 26/66=39%
2010s: 10/43=23%
Holding steady at 20%
since the decade of second-wave feminism, TPR only got into
the game, in the previous decade. So far in this decade, however,
they've fallen back into old habits. And yet somehow we find
ourselves talking about a past Dark Age for female writers.
Fucking pathetic.
It's one thing when
dinosaurs like the LRB, NWRB, or Paris Review
offend. What's really irksome is when sexist attitudes are carried
over into a new medium, and perpetuated by young people. This is the
case with Scott Esposito's The Quarterly Conversation, an
online journal devoted to international modernist literature in
translation that I'd like to love, if only it weren't for the
distinct odour of machismo presiding over
the proceedings. As proof, here are the stats from the past 10
issues, nos. 29 (Fall 2012) to 38 (Winter 2014). These are the number
of articles about women out of total articles about a woman or
a man (usually an author, but sometimes a filmmaker); so themed
articles are excluded. (I also excluded translators as contributors,
which is ironic given the nature of the publication, but less
confusing.)
Issue 29, articles
about women: 5/20
Issue 29, female
contributors: 4/21
Issue 30, articles
about women: 3/25
Issue 30, female
contributors: 11/27
Issue 31, articles
about women: 11/31
Issue 31, female
contributors: 12/31
Issue 32, articles
about women: 2/18
Issue 32, female
contributors: 9/21
Issue 33, articles
about women: 3/19
Issue 33, female
contributors: 4/19
Issue 34, articles
about women: 4/21
Issue 34, female
contributors: 6/25
Issue 35, articles
about women: 11/22
Issue 35, female
contributors: 7/23
Issue 36, articles
about women: 1/10
Issue 36, female
contributors: 4/10
Issue 37, articles
about women: 3/16
Issue 37, female
contributors: 5/16
Issue 38, articles
about women: 3/12
Issue 38, female
contributors: 7/14
Total articles about
women: 46/194=23.7%
Total female
contributors: 69/207=33.3%
So, about a quarter of
the articles over the last 10 issues are about women, and a third of
the contributors are female. What are we to make of this? Are women,
internationally, not writing experimental fiction and poetry? Are
they not being published? Are they writing and being published but
not being taken seriously enough to be translated? Are they writing
and being published and translated but not being taken seriously by
TQC?
The links along the
right side of the QC website, to articles on the site's
contemporary heroes (two of them dead at a young age), McCarthy, DFW,
Murakami, and Bolano, so no women, were what made me first
start pondering the place of women in serious contemporary fiction. I
knew that the traditional heroes of modernism and postmodernism were
men: all of the High Modernists except for Woolf, and especially
Joyce and Kafka; Faulkner, Beckett, Pynchon. But that was in the
past. Surely no one would perpetuate such preposterous
hero-worship now that so many more women were writing, and we were
all alert to, and on the same page (SO TO SPEAK) about, the injustice of gender
bias.
Or then again....
There are of course
other, more female-friendly places one can go on the internet to read
about serious new writing, such as Jessa Crispin's Bookslut.
My quarrel with TQC is not that there are no alternatives to
its modernist machismo, but that that machismo is unnecessary and
antiquated, and especially disappointing in an online-only
publication, which should break with the biases of the past.
Popular Music
For me, the Village
Voice Pazz & Jop Reader's Poll is the only bright spot out of all
of this research, revealing as it does how the number of women in
rock has risen, and the profile of women in rock with it, while the
profile of women in pop has also risen, and with it, the prestige of
pop. Still, as we get to the most recent poll, only
34% of the top 100 albums have female artists attached to
them – and I counted cases where there was even one woman, not
necessarily the singer, in the band.
1970s: The website only
lists 10 albums up until 2008. In the inaugural year, albums by
female artists creep into the 9th and 10th
spots: Joni Mitchell's Blue and Carole King's Tapestry.
In 1975, Mitchell's Court and Spark tops the list, but there
are no other albums by female artists on it, or any women in the
bands on the list. In 1974, Patti Smith is the only female artist to
get on the list, with Horses, in the second spot. There is
obviously already goodwill toward women who are serious songwriters –
but not many around. In 1976, Kate & Anne McGarrigle take the 5th
spot, with Joni two spots behind. In 1977, only Fleetwood Mac, in the
4th spot with Rumours, features women. In 1978
there are finally none at all, and in 1979 we're back to the initial
situation, with Donna Summer's Bad Girls sneaking into the
10th spot, and the B-52s at no. 7.
1980s: Things remain pretty much the same in the 80s. There are no women to be found on the list in 1980, but in 1981, X (whom I confess I've never heard of before) is in the 2nd spot, Rickie Lee Jones in the 5th spot, and The Go-Gos in the 10th spot. In 1982, Richard & Linda Thompson are in the 2nd spot; X sneaks into the 10th. In 1983 – X again, this time in the 4th spot... and that's it. In 1984, Tina Turner is in the 5th spot; in 1985, Aretha Franklin's at no. 9; in 1986... nothing. In 1987: nothing. In 1988, we're in business again: Sonic Youth at no. 2, Tracy Chapman at no. 3, Michelle Shocked at no. 5. In 1989, Neneh Cherry is at no. 5, and The Mekons and Soul II Soul have women in them, as do The Pixies, at no. 10.
1990s: This is where
things change. All of a sudden, a lot of women are being taken
seriously across the board, in rock, in punk, in electronica, in
country, and in hip-hop, and there are a lot more all-female or
female-led bands around. Sinead O'Connor takes the second spot in
1990; Sonic Youth is at no. 4; and Roseanne Cash is at no. 8. In 1991
(the year of Nevermind), there's only The Mekons, squeezing
into the last spot. The following year, P. J. Harvey appears for the
first time; the next year Liz Phair takes the no. 1 spot (beating out
In Utero), Harvey is in the 3rd spot, and The
Breeders are in the fourth. Hole take the no. 1 spot in 1994, with
Liz Phair in the 6th spot. In 1995, top spot to P. J.
Harvey (third year in the row for a woman or female-led band),
Elastica is at no. 4, and Bjork at no. 7. In 1996, the Fugees are at
no. 2, Sleater-Kinney at no. 3, and Amy Rigby at no. 8. The
following year it's Sleater-Kinney at no. 4, Missy Elliott at no. 6,
Erykah Badu at no. 7, and Bjork at no. 9. In 1998, it's Lucinda
Williams at no. 1, Lauryn Hill in the second spot, and P. J. Harvey
at no. 7. The decade closes on a slow year for women, with only Fiona
Apple, at no. 7, and Beth Orton, at no. 9; and there's a woman in The
Magnetic Fields.
2000s: The 2000s start
strong. Year 1: P. J. Harvey (2), Shelby Lynne (4), Jill Scott (9),
and Sleater-Kinney (10). 2001: Bjork (3) and Lucinda Williams (9).
2002: Sleater-Kinney (5) and Missy Elliott (10) – but where are the
new artists? There are some in 2003: The Yeah Yeah Yeahs (5), led by
Karen O; and The New Pornographers (7), featuring Neko Case. But in
2004, there's only Loretta Lynn, at no. 3. 2005 is a good year, with
a new artist, M.I.A. bursting onto the scene at no. 2, Sleater-Kinney
and Fiona Apple at 4 and 5, and The New Pornographers at 9. In 2006,
a Neko Case solo album gets into the 8th spot, with Joanna
Newsom right behind it. M.I.A. takes third position the following
year, with Amy Winehouse's Back to Black right behind her.
2008: Portishead in the 3rd spot, Erykah Badu in the 5th
spot, and Santogold at no. 7. 2009: Neko Case at no. 3, Yeah Yeah
Yeahs at no. 4, Dirty Projectors at no. 5., and The xx at no. 7.
Only
including bands with significant female content, then, the 2000s hold
strong, with female artists making up about 25% of the Top 10s in
both the 1990s and the 2000s. That's compared to about 15% in the 80s
and around 10% in the 70s. The importance of the 1990s to women in
popular music can't be underestimated. But what about the
current decade – and the Top 100 albums?
The
wondrous Janelle Monae emerges in 2010, taking the 4th
spot. There are women in Arcade Fire, and Beach
House and Sleigh Bells are male-female duos. Merrill Garbus's tUnE-yArDs take the no. 1 spot in 2011, with P. J. Harvey back in the second spot, Wild Flag in the 4th spot, and Adele in the 6th spot. In 2012 there's Fiona Apple at no. 3, Grimes at no. 9, and Beach House at 10; in 2013, Beyonce's at no. 4, My Bloody Valentine at 6, Haim at 7, Janelle Monae at 8, and Kacey Musgraves at 10. Finally, in 2014, St. Vincent took the no.4 spot, with FKA Twigs (a producer!) at 5, Taylor Swift at 7, and Angel Olsen at 8. For the decade so far, content by (cis) women is at 35.6%; in the Top 10, 40%, a big leap again from the 2000s.
2008: 3/10; 25/100
2009: 4/10; 42/100
2010: 4/10; 32/100
2011: 4/10; 39/100
2012: 3/10; 39/100
2013: 5/10; 34/100
2014: 4/10; 34/100
Verdict: The 90s were
the breakthrough decade for serious female artists in popular music,
following in the wake of pioneers like Joni Mitchell and Patti Smith.
But although there were suddenly a few dozen female artists and bands
of major reputation, the mass of buzzy bands and rappers out there,
most of whom will only appear on these lists once, are still
overwhelmingly male. Women hover at 35-40% of the total content, but
only if you include a lot of bands with only one female members, who
is not the lead singer or main songwriter; or a couple of female
members, if it's a large collective. If you stick to girl bands,
female-led bands, male-female duos, and female solo artists, it would
probably be more like 30-35%.
Part 2: Best-Sellers
In commercial popular
music, women have also gained successes in recent years without
attaining full parity – as sellers; who knows how well
they're paid. If the music industry is anything like the movie
industry, which it probably is, there's probably even less parity
there, but probably also some gains in recent decades.
I didn't bother to look
at prizes for the music section because my time is limited and I'm way
more interested in which albums Village Voice readers like
than in which albums win Grammys. Whereas although I don't give any
more credence to the Pulitzer Prize than to the Grammys, I was more
interested in finding out how women had fared with the former than in
tracking down decades of year-end best-books lists. So basically, the
research I did for this post reflects partly what I happened to want
to know about a particular topic and partly what information was
(readily) available on that topic.
To get a rough idea of how women in popular music sell, I looked at this Tsort site, which has compiled chart info from worldwide sources.
Out of the 50 biggest chart
acts, worldwide, by decade:
1960s: Barbra Streisand
(22); The Supremes (23); Aretha Franklin (29); Peter, Paul, and Mary
(33); Petula Clark (35); Joan Baez (42)
1970s: ABBA (4); Donna
Summer (23); Fleetwood Mac (27); The Carpenters (28); Carole King
(42)
1980s: Madonna (2); The
Eurythmics (12); Whitney Houston (15); Tina Turner (31); Diana Ross
(35); Pat Benatar (42); ABBA (46)
1990s: Mariah Carey
(1); Madonna (2); Celine Dion (3); Whitney Houston (7); Janet Jackson
(17); Alanis Morisette (20); Spice Girls (21); Roxette (24); Ace of
Base (34); TLC (36); The Cranberries (37); Cher (47); Sheryl Crow
(48); Shania Twain (49)
2000s: Madonna (2);
Britney Spears (3); Beyonce (7); The Black Eyed Peas (8); Pink (10);
Avril Lavigne (11); Alicia Keyes (14); Norah Jones (15); Jennifer
Lopez (20); Rihanna (21); Mariah Carey (25); Shakira (28); Celine
Dion (30); Christina Aguilera (31); Destiny's Child (35); Kelley
Clarkson (36); Kylie Minogue (38); Nelly Furtado (39); The White
Stripes (40); Evanescence (43); Taylor Swift (46)
In the 1960s, the women
who chart highest, making up only 12% of the Top 50, have nothing to
do with rock. In fact there are no women in rock, at all, at this
point, and the only women on the list that have anything to do with
modern pop are The Supremes. In the 1970s, the supreme decade of the
rock group, it's worse. ABBA, the epitome of modern pop, get into the
Top 10 with two women, and Donna Summer, the queen of disco, is the
first female solo artist on the list. There's also Fleetwood Mac,
another 70s supergroup of married couples, and, of course, The
Carpenters.
Madonna leads the way
to the light in the 1980s, showing what a female pop superstar really
looks like. Annie Lennox and Whitney Houston are other pioneers, and
Streisand comes back strong, but other than Madonna in the no. 2
spot, women haven't made that much advancement.
But wait! We were just
warming up. In the 1990s, female solo artists occupy the first three
spots, and female acts or acts featuring women make up 28% of the Top
50. It seems as though the 1990s are a breakthrough for women in
music commercially, as it was for women in music being taken
seriously. Second-wave feminism may have failed to produced any
theorists that I wanted to read, but I can't argue with its effects
on music. The seeds were sown, however, in the era of first-wave
feminism. Patti Smith showed us what a female rock star looked like,
and even if The Runaways were manufactured and exploitative,
afterwards it was possible to envision a female rock band. By the
1990s there are a lot more women in bands, even if they're usually in
bands as vocalists, and Madonna has provided the model of a female
pop star who's obviously and unapologetically in control of her image
and career. But few post-Madonna female pop stars will give us the
impression of control over their careers and personas from beginning
to end, and few – certainly none of the white ones – will be
allowed to not be girls-next-door, however crossed-with-porn-star
their image may be.
And the improvement
holds during the following decade, with female acts/female-featuring
acts getting up to 42%. This has little to do with women in bands and
a lot to do with remaking pop, after the example of Madonna and the
decline of Michael Jackson, as exclusively female. No need to fight
the perception that the role played by women in popular music is as
vocalists and, with few exceptions, eye candy. The exceptions are the
true legends, but the standards of appearance for people in the
public eye seem to get higher all the time, especially for women,
that it's hard to think of Judy Garland or Barbra Streisand becoming
superstars now – and it was implausible enough at the time. Reality
TV let an ordinary young woman, Kelly Clarkson, become a star, and
the internet allowed Adele, a plus-size woman, to become a megastar,
and those seem to be the only means. A different, “edgier” style
of attractiveness is favoured in the indie rock world, and being too
conventionally attractive, like Lana Del Rey, can get you kicked out
of the cool kids' club, but the ornamental function of the frontwoman
still has few and usually partial exceptions – which is why someone
like Merrill Garbus is such a delightful surprise.
Now women seem to be stuck – and men too. Once it was considered acceptable for men to be crooners – neither songwriters nor musicians. Elvis wielded a guitar but didn't write his songs, and was primarily known as a voice, face, and set of hips. A decade on, it had become necessary to be “authentic” and write your own material. But women had a harder time making the shift, and have continued to have a hard time going behind the scenes in other ways – notoriously, as producers and engineers. For one thing, women were going into popular music as vocalists rather than forming bands, so writing their own songs wasn't a natural step. For another, there was no shame for women in being ornamental – at least not yet. Ultimately, this situation – where “authentic” rock or indie musicians wrote their own material but “manufactured” pop singers had their songs written for them – led to an unfair devaluation of the role of vocalist. But perhaps this was also partly because it was so easy to sell a pretty white girl with a pleasant voice.
Merrill Garbus |
Now women seem to be stuck – and men too. Once it was considered acceptable for men to be crooners – neither songwriters nor musicians. Elvis wielded a guitar but didn't write his songs, and was primarily known as a voice, face, and set of hips. A decade on, it had become necessary to be “authentic” and write your own material. But women had a harder time making the shift, and have continued to have a hard time going behind the scenes in other ways – notoriously, as producers and engineers. For one thing, women were going into popular music as vocalists rather than forming bands, so writing their own songs wasn't a natural step. For another, there was no shame for women in being ornamental – at least not yet. Ultimately, this situation – where “authentic” rock or indie musicians wrote their own material but “manufactured” pop singers had their songs written for them – led to an unfair devaluation of the role of vocalist. But perhaps this was also partly because it was so easy to sell a pretty white girl with a pleasant voice.
Despite the huge
success of Alanis Morissette's Jagged Little Pill (1995),
somehow the notion of marketing female rock singer-songwriters
didn't take off, whereas the solo female pop star after the Madonna
model became a juggernaut. But then if you look at the albums that are selling in the US in this decade, there are no performers that
one would call “rock,” either male or female, while “rap” is
only one category among many (and there are even some top-selling
female rappers). The favoured categories are male solo performers,
female solo performers, and bands, in about equal numbers, and rock
and roll might never have happened (whereas the favouring of country
acts is an American eccentricity). The female percentage suffers
because the all-male band continues to be the norm while the
all-female band continues to be an eccentricity.
The idea that there
should be more women in rock or rap has nothing to do with women's
success in popular music – at least not at this stage. Women are
doing great as solo vocalists, probably much better than they did in
the pre-rock era, although they'd do better still if there were more
women in bands, which appear to be the only legacy from the rock era
in the charts. Only hipsters (such as the Village Voice readers) keep rock alive, and increasingly rap as well, it seems.
No, the main reason to
care about women getting into rock or rap has to do with the prestige
accorded these genres as originally male genres. Of course
women have great reasons to rebel and be angry, and no doubt it's
helpful to the cause of feminism for women to show that they can
project aggression, intimidation, and power, so it's easy to see why
the idea of women in these genres appeals – to women, and to fans
of the genres – and why the idea of these genres appeals to women.
Still, encouraging women who want to try non-traditional (i.e.,
“masculine”) things easily turns into denigrating “feminine”
things, since our culture is already eager to encourage the latter.
And we should be wary of this as feminists, even as we're aware that
asserting the awesomeness of Disney princesses is not a sufficient
kind of feminism.
(As one example: you still hear well-meaning people bemoan the fact that there has never been a queen of late-night TV. But why is this such a terrible thing when women clean up as day-time hosts? Ellen DeGeneres already out-earns David Letterman. Just because an area is female-dominated doesn't always make it pink-collar. Of course the domination of the daytime talk show by female hosts depends on a lot of women being at home with the kids, at least temporarily. But that's another story.)
(As one example: you still hear well-meaning people bemoan the fact that there has never been a queen of late-night TV. But why is this such a terrible thing when women clean up as day-time hosts? Ellen DeGeneres already out-earns David Letterman. Just because an area is female-dominated doesn't always make it pink-collar. Of course the domination of the daytime talk show by female hosts depends on a lot of women being at home with the kids, at least temporarily. But that's another story.)
Film and TV
Hollywood's problems
with women seem to get endless attention without anything ever
changing. And I'm just talking about its problems developing movies
with female leads or even non-perfunctory supporting female
characters, and, when it happens, paying the actresses as much as the
actors. Let alone with getting women into a directing role.
I'm sure that many more women are directing now than in my early 20s, when I took it for granted that film directing just wasn't something that women did. (Since I like movies a lot and admire many directors, that thought did bug me a little, but not that much, since I had no interest in directing movies myself.) Even now, though, there's usually only one fashionable female director at a time, and without the help of the internet, I know the names of less than half a dozen that are currently working.
The gender parity gap in the US entertainment industry has been well-covered, so I'm not going to add new information here. I'll just restate some of the points and discoveries that have been made:
I'm sure that many more women are directing now than in my early 20s, when I took it for granted that film directing just wasn't something that women did. (Since I like movies a lot and admire many directors, that thought did bug me a little, but not that much, since I had no interest in directing movies myself.) Even now, though, there's usually only one fashionable female director at a time, and without the help of the internet, I know the names of less than half a dozen that are currently working.
The gender parity gap in the US entertainment industry has been well-covered, so I'm not going to add new information here. I'll just restate some of the points and discoveries that have been made:
- Jennifer Lawrence was the top-grossing actor in Hollywood in 2014, yet she was paid less than her male co-stars on American Hustle.
- In 2014, the combined spoils of the top 10 highest-earning Hollywood actresses was a little over half that of the top 10 actors
- In 2013, according to a study by San Diego State's Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film, women represented 15 percent of protagonists in the 100 top-grossing films, 29 percent of major characters, and 30 percent of speaking characters
Now that TV series
creators are starting to emerge as auteurs, it also bugs me that
the problem from film seems to belong to the entertainment industry
in general. And it's not just the entertainment industry. The problem
is also a culture of fandom, criticism, and its overlap – as with
cinephiles and auteurists in film criticism/fandom and modernist
machismo in literary culture – that perpetuates the idea of the
hero-worship of men by men (and sometimes by women) as
culture. Hence the hilariously solemn celebration of Matthew Weiner
and Vince Gilligan, or, in geekier corners, the giddier fandom
directed toward Dan Harmon (and Joss Whedon and Gene Roddenberry
before him). (In fact I'm pretty sure that TV auteurism emerged in
sci-fi corners first – didn't it? Not counting British comedian
comedy.)
The only high-profile
female tele-teurs to date have been Lena Dunham, who also gets a
spectacular amount of hate, and Jenji Kohan, who is generally
considered to be extremely uneven as a showrunner based on her first
series, Weeds. (Which really does suck after the second season.) Among
the series creators that one hears less about because they make popular
television, the phenomenal Shonda Rhimes had two TV shows among the Top 50 broadcast TV shows of 2013/2014, both near the top; 2 Broke Girls was
co-created by Whitney Cummings; Maurissa Tancharoen co-created Agents
of S.H.I.E.L.D. with the Whedon brothers; Gemma Baker co-created
Mom with Chuck Lorre and Eddie Gorodetsky; Elizabeth
Meriwether created New Girl; Elise Doganieri co-created The
Amazing Race; The Middle was, amazingly, co-created by two
women, DeAnn Heline and Eileen Heisler; the now-cancelled (after one
season) Super Fun Night was created by star Rebel Wilson; and
that, of the 53 non-football shows on the list, sometimes with up to
four male co-creators, is it.
Shonda Rhimes |
The one area where we
can trace improvement for women, both commercially and in terms of
prestige, is popular music. In the mainstream, there hasn't been much
challenging of gender norms by women, but in the 80s, the solo pop
star regained the ground lost to bands, and female pop stars became a
charts fixture, ever-increasing in numbers and stature. Nor should it
be forgotten that Madonna's projection of both financial and sexual
power as a global superstar was its own kind of challenge of gender
roles, and allowed women in pop to have more assertive personas –
although that, of course, has now become simply a box to tick (not
unlike male rock “attitude”). Among music lovers, the prestige of
female artists has steadily grown, and although the 90s burst of all-female rock bands didn't keep up, it's now more common in indie to
see female-led bands (but not that common).
Film is still going
through a Dark Ages as far as gender parity goes, and TV isn't much
better. Presumably women have had trouble breaking into film
directing for the same reasons they've had trouble breaking into
music production: because it requires combating stereotypes about
women and leadership and women and technology. But we notice this
more in the area of film, because the director is the auteur, whereas
in music, the artist is usually assumed to the be the auteur. Music
journalists and critics pay some attention to producers, but
overwhelmingly their attention, and the attention of the public, is
directed toward the artist. In mainstream music, often producers have
more creative control than the artists, but that is precisely the
area that receives less attention from music journalists and critics.
Only in the area of club music are producers considered auteurs by
aficionados.
In literature and
fiction, the position of women as either prize winners or sellers
hasn't substantially improved since the beginning of the 20th
century, and it is notably vulnerable and subject to setbacks. For
the past couple of decades women's writing has had a commercial boom,
I think largely due to the phenomenon of female fandom, which saw
adult women reading YA genre lit and teenage girls reading online
erotica, as well as vice versa, and the YA lit becoming online erotica and then becoming a best-selling print erotica series. This
boom relies on marketing literature by women to women,
but then so did the successful marketing of commercial fiction by men
to men for so many decades. In this moribund time for books,
publishers have found a way to tap into a thriving market of
female readers.
In the area of literary
prizes, there's no clear rhyme or reason at all to the fate of women.
In recent decades women have won the Pulitzer for Fiction more often
than in the 40s and 50s, but less often than in the 20s and 30s.
Overall, female writers have won the Pulitzer 35% of the time, which
is the same percentage as female winners of the Man Booker Prize –
but since the 1980s, which is to say, in the era of modern feminism,
women have won the Man Booker only 30% of the time.
Meanwhile, in the
Canadian poetry scene, women would appear to be at parity. Now how
did they manage that? Was there such an abundance of female poets, or
such a dearth of male ones, that women got in control of the
prize-giving? And if parity can be achieved in this area, why not in
all of them? While it's easy to see how having children could
interfere with the career of a TV writer or a Hollywood director,
it's less easy to see how it could interfere with the career of the
majority of novelists, poets, playwrights, musicians, or indie
directors, who make very little money and, accordingly, have low
stakes attached to starting late or taking long breaks. I could see
the low income of being part of the arts community making a woman put
off having children more easily than I can see the choice to have
children being a blow to her career. Is institutional sexism the
biggest obstacle to women's advancement in the arts, or do most
women, whatever else they want to do with their lives, simply prefer
to put motherhood first? I don't know, but I don't think we can deny
that the combination of the two, and the way they reinforce each
other, is the reason that parity seems to be so difficult.
In cinema, not only are things slow to improve behind the camera; in front of it, things may have actually gotten
worse. Conventional wisdom attributes this to a combination of late
capitalism and competition from TV, which made the marketers panic
and decide that they should only make movies for teenage boys. Lo and
behold, those teenage boys grew up and became middle-aged men, and
still wanted to see the same kind of movies: even better for
Hollywood, but worse for women who like movies, and worst of all for
actresses. And since corporate filmmaking has no investment in
diversity, only in making money, no one wants to make the effort of
making action blockbusters with female protagonists, even though at
least once a decade someone comes along and proves that they can make
money.
I think some blame also
has to go to the auteurs and auteurists, though. American independent
filmmaking has always been a macho enterprise, led by the Kubricks,
Scorseses, Coppolas, and Altmans, and their fanboys. Whatever the
virtues of these filmmakers, it is rare for American auteurs to be interested in telling stories about women
(the alternative tradition is represented by De Palma, Cassavetes, and Lynch); whereas
in Europe, as Molly Haskell has pointed out (with a lot more
savageness than I would use, especially with regard to the heroines
of Dreyer – and yet I take her point), directors kept using women,
but as symbols more than as characters. In any case, in recent years
it's hard to find a female protagonist whether you're in the mood for
a blockbuster or for arthouse fare.
But what do the execs
of publishing houses, movies studios, and TV networks think that
women are doing? They don't think we're going to movies; they've only
recently found out that we read; and they can't think we're watching
TV, since few shows with female main characters can be found there.
Of course there are exceptions on network TV: Grey's Anatomy
is a soapy monster; Modern Family features upper-middle-class
men and women who are in completely traditional gender roles, for
which the “clueless,” yet understandably smug, men are endlessly
beaten down by the “assertive,” yet economically dependent, women;
the female characters on The Big Bang Theory and How I Met
Your Mother are almost as important as the male characters; there
are lots of genre shows with female sidekicks, like Elementary,
Bones, and now Sleepy Hollow.
It does look like things are a little better for women in front of
the camera in TV than in movies, though not great.
Modern Family, a convincing argument for the extreme horror of traditional gender roles (the gay couple included), where no one wins |
I'd
like to know, however, if female stars ever had the box-office draw
that male stars did, and if “woman's pictures” were ever made in
greater numbers than they are now. That genre is remembered primarily
because the memory the great female stars of Hollywood was kept alive
by gay men (definitely not by auteurists), which allowed young women
of later generations a point of entry into film history. So as much as I
admire Stephanie Zacharek's Kael-influenced critical voice, I can't
share her bewilderment and seeming distaste (in an interview on the
podcast The Cinephiliacs)
at the fact that well-known female film bloggers like Kim Morgan and
Farran Smith Nehme have come to share the gay male admiration of
these actresses. Men worship men all the time, and women worship men,
too, because there aren't enough celebrated women to worship – so
we can always do with finding more.
Presumably the parity gap that remains in these and other areas is the result of a combination of unconscious sexism on the part of men; women being less interested in these areas than men; and the difficulty of combining motherhood and career. Although the basis of one kind of classic feminism is to argue that women would be exactly like men if the obstacles to it were removed, it is also possible to argue that biology predisposes men and women differently and that they should not be forced to be the same or exact parity expected in everything. The evidence, however, is that the number of women in areas once thought reserved for men climb as attitudes toward what women can do change over generations.
How do attitudes change? Through the actions of pioneering women (and the men who welcome them and even champion them) and through men and women calling attention to sexism. The best way to prevent calling attention to sexism from descending into petty bullying and harassment of men is, I think, to have a movement that's centered on women's achievement: on what women can do, not what is done to them. But that's for a future post. Others think we have to take action, such as by creating special classes or camps for girls to combat the societal message that there are certain things they can't do. Should change happen organically, over time, or should it be pushed along by directing girls into male-dominated areas? I don't have the answers, but I think we should all keep asking questions.