Were the statistics you cited regarding ethnicity and publishing solely with respect to America? The "discourse" is very Americanised, and American cultural mores get projected onto the context, regardless of the context, basically every in the Anglosphere. And as for women "winning and dominating", it would seem incoherent to argue that…
Were the statistics you cited regarding ethnicity and publishing solely with respect to America? The "discourse" is very Americanised, and American cultural mores get projected onto the context, regardless of the context, basically every in the Anglosphere. And as for women "winning and dominating", it would seem incoherent to argue that having more men published is somehow unrepresentative of the human experience and in need of rectification; yet 73% of books being published being by female authors isn't of equal concern. And, "come on...they had their turn" is one of the most intellectually incurious things I have ever heard.
Were the statistics you cited regarding ethnicity and publishing solely with respect to America? The "discourse" is very Americanised, and American cultural mores get projected onto the context, regardless of the context, basically every in the Anglosphere. And as for women "winning and dominating", it would seem incoherent to argue that having more men published is somehow unrepresentative of the human experience and in need of rectification; yet 73% of books being published being by female authors isn't of equal concern. And, "come on...they had their turn" is one of the most intellectually incurious things I have ever heard.
I only have experience working in American book publishing and I’m not qualified to comment on foreign markets
I’m sure they aren’t writing many STEM books so the actual intellectual side is still covered.
I’d be interested to see how much emotion and drama you can fit into an engineering manual though…