Men’s Voices in Literature

Words that give away a writer’s gender, from Ben Blatt’s book “Nabokov’s Favorite Word Is Mauve”

Are books getting dumber? Does good writing really use fewer -ly adverbs? Is there really such a thing as “how women write”?

In a new book, data journalist Ben Blatt uses statistics to analyze literature, testing large sets of classic literature, modern bestsellers, and contemporary literary fiction for common questions and assumptions. Nabokov’s Favorite Word Is Mauve came out March 14 from Simon & Schuster. While its results should be taken as seriously as the questions (that is to say, lightly, and with salt), many offer interesting insights and make for fun reading themselves.

To find out which words indicated female and male authorship in classic literature, Blatt used methods similar to those used in 2013 by University of Pennsylvania computer scientists to analyze Facebook statuses. He took a list of words found in classic literature and for each one created a ratio: how many female authors used them more than the average, over how many men used them less than average, or vice versa. This generated a list of the words with the biggest imbalance between the two genders.

One of the most commonly used words by female authors of classic lit, that was rarely ever used by male ones, is “curls.” Female authors hardly ever used the word “rear,” though male authors did.


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