As randomness* would have it, I just ran into an example of women doing that to a woman for her fiction.
Just read the article. Given the information presented my prior is that Jamaica Kincaid got her job due to (possibly informal) affirmative action, i.e., the New Yorker felt like they needed a black female writer to be “diverse”.
True. This is my prior for “black female author gets extremely fast tracked” and the article didn’t say anything that would make me update away from it.
What are the odds?
Also, do you apply a downwards adjustment to your evaluation of a woman’s original mathematics?
As randomness* would have it, I just ran into an example of women doing that to a woman for her fiction.
*On the radio as I was catching up on the thread.
Just read the article. Given the information presented my prior is that Jamaica Kincaid got her job due to (possibly informal) affirmative action, i.e., the New Yorker felt like they needed a black female writer to be “diverse”.
You don’t know how many black female authors they’ve got, and you haven’t read any of her work.
True. This is my prior for “black female author gets extremely fast tracked” and the article didn’t say anything that would make me update away from it.
Depends on what other evidence I have.