So, grass-roots organizations have set about trying to change the ratio. Groups such as Art + Feminism sponsor regular "hackathons," to train more diverse groups of Wikipedia editors, and to publish a broader range of articles.
Loading
Martha Mendoza's article was created by Mintaro Oba, a Washington, D.C.-based speechwriter whose colleagues at West Wing Writers recently decided to launch a side project: making more Wikipedia articles about women. As writers themselves, they opted to focus on authors, journalists and poets.
"Most male journalists who have two Pulitzers have Wikipedia pages," Oba notes. So when he learned about Mendoza, he wanted to make sure his submission was approved. He backed up the article with an "epic onslaught of credible sources," to craft an airtight argument for her inclusion.
So much of progress requires doing exactly that: rewriting history. Digging out new sources. Making our collective encyclopedia bigger.
Last year, the New York Times launched a project titled "Overlooked," which retroactively writes obituaries for forgotten people – women and people of color whose deaths were not considered historic enough for obituaries when they happened.
Loading
This month, among others: a children's welfare advocate who helped more than 500 mixed-race orphans find homes after World War II and a clothing designer who outfitted Ella Fitzgerald and Eartha Kitt.
Half of progress is about recognizing women whose accomplishments were, as the Times puts it, "overlooked." But I think the other half of progress is something we consider even less: reframing our understanding of accomplishments. Asking ourselves to interrogate what events are important and questioning what counts as history at all.
One of Oba's colleagues, Ilana Ross, who spearheaded the company's Wikipedia project, told me the group had tried to submit a Wikipedia article on the New Zealand writer Alison Waley, but it was rejected. She showed me a screenshot of the rejection. Perhaps, it posited, Waley could just be part of her husband's Wikipedia article instead?
It was complicated, Ross said, because Waley's most famous work was, in fact, a memoir about life with her husband. He was a noted translator whom Waley had known for years, though they only married shortly before his death. While Arthur was receiving public accolades for public work, Alison was cataloguing the private, quotidian parts of life: portraits of time, place, parties and people.
But wasn't that also valuable? Ross asked. Weren't those things also important contributions to history – a way of understanding how people lived and what the world looked like?
History can be rewritten. History can be rewritten, because it doesn't have to be contained in pages anymore, and the potential for expansion is unlimited. And because doing it better the second time around shows that we've learned from our incomplete job the first time.
I emailed Martha Mendoza a few days ago. She didn't know she had a Wikipedia page until I told her. And while she was pleased with it – it's a good, factual article, she said – her reasons didn't have anything to do with honor or recognition. She simply thought having one would make her job easier. Now, when she approached a source for a story and asked for an interview, she could direct them to her page to prove she was a real journalist, and to help them understand the kind of reporting she did.
For that reason, she'd wanted a page for a while. "I thought about asking someone to do it for me," she said. "But it's a little like asking someone to enter you in a contest."
It seemed unseemly and self-aggrandizing to her; she couldn't imagine actually suggesting it. She was glad she hadn't needed to, and that someone else had seen her.
The Washington Post