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lifeofkj:

justira:

Abstract

This project demonstrates that SFF books by or about cis women are less likely to win awards than books by or about cis men. Trans and nonbinary authors do not win awards at all, and trans or nonbinary protagonists are extremely rare. Overall, there were more award-winning books written by cis men about cis men than there were books by women about anybody. While there have been recent gains in terms of diversity in awarded books, this is likely part of a cycle of gains and pushback that has repeated itself throughout the history of SFF awards. SFF awards have a problem when it comes to gender: they privilege cis men and the cis male experience over that of cis women and trans and nonbinary individuals.

Introduction

I am justira and I am the lead editor on this project. I collaborated on it with heyheyrenay (Data Monkey & Culture Consultant) and lifeofkj (Reality Checker), whose help was invaluable. We would also like to thank Kate Elliot, Niall Harrison, and Paul Weimer, who helped us in some cases where we were unsure about protagonist gender.

I’ve been wanting to look at gender breakdowns in SFF awards for a while, and then Nicola Griffith did her post about gender and awards, and it showed exactly what I was afraid of. But I wanted more — I wanted all the major SFF awards, for the life of each award. This post represents over 100 hours of work spent researching awards, authors, and books.

Read the Results and Analysis on Lady Business!

This is important work that everyone with any interest in SF/F, visibility and awards, and/or publishing should see (and I’m not just saying that because I helped compile the data).