Nearly half of all book reviews in Australia in 2018 were of works by female authors

<span>Photograph: Jacobs Stock Photography Ltd/Getty Images</span>
Photograph: Jacobs Stock Photography Ltd/Getty Images

Researchers have praised most Australian publications for reaching gender parity in their book review sections last year.

Of published book reviews in Australia in 2018 49% were for books written by women, according to research published on Thursday by the Stella Count.

The Stella Count is Australia’s answer to the Vida Count for literature, which surveys women’s representation in major literary publications and book reviews. The count was established in 2012 alongside the Stella prize for books by women to highlight gender disparity in Australian literary culture.

Conducted with academics from Australian National University and Monash University, the Stella Count involves researchers combing book review sections of 12 major Australian newspapers and book reviewing publications, tallying the number of books reviewed and the gender of the books’ authors.

The Stella Count also notes the gender identity of the reviewer, and the space given to reviews of books by women compared with those by men.

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Books by women authors comprised 50% or more of the reviews in nine of the 12 publications surveyed in 2018, up from four in 2017 and 2016. In 2015, only one publication had achieved parity in this respect.

Julianne Lamond, from the Australian National University, who leads the analysis of the data, told Guardian Australia the count was an important way to measure what kinds of stories were making their way into the public consciousness.

“If we think about our ideas about what men and women are, what kinds of stories can and can’t be told, and what kinds of stories are considered important, whether books by men and women are getting equal access to those pages is really important,” she said. “It’s a really important way that cultural prestige is created.”

Tasmania’s the Mercury newspaper saw the largest increase in reviews of books by women, from 44% in 2017 to 56% in 2018. Industry magazine Books+Publishing had the highest proportion of women authors reviewed, at 71%, while representation of books by women authors was the lowest at the Weekend Australian (40%) and Australian Book Review (41%).

Australian Book Review was the only publication that recorded a downward trend in women authors reviewed, and in women reviewers, over the seven years the count has been conducted.

Analysis also showed that more women than men were employed as reviewers of books in 2018. This corresponded with an increase in the number of books reviewed overall, suggesting both books and reviews written by women had been added to review sections, rather than taking the place of those by men.

Women also received more access to what Lamond called “the big name-making reviews” – that is, reviews of 1,000 words or more – in 2018 than in any of the preceding years, with 47% of these dedicated to women authors compared to 36% in 2017.

Guardian Australia is not one of the publications included in the Stella Count.

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The survey is “a way of holding publications to account”, Lamond said, because it highlighted “not just the fact that bias exists but how it’s working in these publications”.

Of continuing concern was the trend of “partitioned criticism”, in which men tended to review books by men and women tended to review books by women. “There’s a gender essentialism at work – the idea that books written by women are just for women and books written by men are just for men.”

The impact of “partitioned criticism” was particularly significant for women writers.

“Books by men can often be considered more serious even if they’re about the same subject matter that women are writing about. So Jonathan Franzen writes about family and it’s a serious book, and for every woman writer that does the same it’s considered a woman’s book. I think there’s still some work to be done there.”

Lamond said the future of the count would involve expanding the project to include “more difficult to quantify aspects” such as non-binary gender identities, race and other forms of diversity within the literary landscape.

“I don’t think there’s any cause for resting on laurels yet, but I do think we should celebrate what’s been achieved,” Lamond said. “We can really see the whole field shifting.”