Diversity and the Two Lefty Blogospheres
by Chris Bowers, Sun Mar 27, 2005 at 08:55:15 AM EST
The commenter describes one reason for this divide: a split between "academia" and "activism." This seems fair enough, for the pre-election time period that the paper studied. TPM had yet to engage in its strong Social Security activism, which I know for a fact has led to a 5+ link exchange with a couple of blogs on the "other side" of the lefty blogosphere. Another reason should be obvious to many others: the second group seems to be part of an expanding dailykos universe, where smaller blogs operated by alumni or associates of kos become part of an expanded dailykos-centric blogosphere.
More interestingly, and related to the previous points, something else is also taking place here: a divide based upon race. From what I can tell, and I admit it is not always easy to tell in cyberspace, almost every single major non-white lefty blogger, such as kos, Oliver Willis, Jesse Taylor, Armando, Meteor Blades and Steve Gillard (there may be others), falls into the "activist / dailykos" group. Of course, several Whitey McWhitersons such as myself fall into that group as well, but by comparison this is a far more diverse group than the "academic" bloggers.
The "activist" lefty blogosphere includes a pretty ethnically diverse group of (yes, almost entirely male) bloggers. I am not going to pretend to know all of the reasons for certain why this is the case, but I am pretty darn certain that the main reason it is the case is that kos himself has consistently promoted, supported, and linked to non-white bloggers. Dailykos is the center of the "activist" lefty blogosphere after all, both in terms of traffic and links, and no one has more power over the bloggers that will be read and heard in that blogosphere than kos. Now, kos claims that he does not take factors such as sex, race or creed into account when choosing front-page writers, and I see no reason to doubt him on this point. However, in the end whether he has intentionally supported writers of color or not really does not matter. Because kos has supported many writers of color, many writers of color have almost always been prominently featured in within the activist, lefty blogosphere. The diversity is that side of the lefty blogosphere is obvious, and it arose almost entirely from decision kos made.
At long last, this brings me back to the discussion on women and political writing that has been taking place over at Washington Monthly. The ethnic diversity to be found within the male bloggers of the activist, lefty political blogosphere should serve as an obvious lesson to all bloggers that it is indeed our actions that determine the diversity of our blogosphere, no matter what type of diversity we are discussing (gender, income, race, creed, ideology, etc). Quite frankly, we have no business blaming any outside forces, including socialization, industry bias, or lack of a "talent pool" for the comparative shortage of female voices in the political blogosphere. Clearly, as the case of the kos-centered blogs show, we can achieve diversity in our blogrolls, link exchanges and writers if we just support a diverse range of voices. As Katha Pollitt wrote in one of her posts during the conversation:
Amy, I think you are right that at present the female pool of opinion writers is smaller than the male pool for all the reasons you suggest. But I would like to hear your thoughts on why it is that the women who are in the pool -- like the women I've mentioned -- are not being employed by the very people who claim to be looking for women! A top place like the New York Times or the Washington Post or the big newsweeklies can hire anyone it wants. The editors don't hire by waiting for the phone to ring, and I'm sure the names I've mentioned -- and dozens of others -- are familiar to them. Just because blatant and subtle sex discrimination is an old and longstanding issue, about which perhaps little that is original can be said and which puts men on the defensive, doesn't mean it's not a big part of the answer.(...)The smaller talent pool is not an insuperable problem. With women, we are hardly talking tiny, minuscule, infinitesimal. Enough smart women with opinions exist so that magazines could be filling their pages with women.
So let's talk about what editors and others can do to bring this happy state about!
Indeed. That is precisely, if not the only, discussion we need to be having on this subject. The blame for the lack of certain kinds of diversity in the political blogosphere, including gender diversity, lies nowhere except on the shoulders of bloggers such as myself. As much as we may claim otherwise, we already are taking factors such as gender into account in our promotion of other blogs and bloggers, and the lack of gender equality in the political blogosphere is the result. Until we admit that and take steps to correct it, the situation will never improve.Tags: Blogosphere (all tags)












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