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April 24

Category:Formula One magazines

Nominator's rationale: Underpopulated category with only two articles (one of which is up for deletion), and unlikely to expand as most publications that pass WP:GNG are included in the more broad Category:Auto racing magazines. QueenCake (talk) 21:30, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

Category:American women novelists

Not a voteIf you came here because someone asked you to, or you read a message on another website, please note that this is not a majority vote, but instead a discussion among Misplaced Pages contributors. Misplaced Pages has policies and guidelines regarding the encyclopedia's content, and consensus (agreement) is gauged based on the merits of the arguments, not by counting votes.

However, you are invited to participate and your opinion is welcome. Remember to assume good faith on the part of others and to sign your posts on this page by adding ~~~~ at the end.

Note: Comments may be tagged as follows: suspected single-purpose accounts: {{subst:spa|username}}; suspected canvassed users: {{subst:canvassed|username}}; accounts blocked for sockpuppetry: {{subst:csm|username}} or {{subst:csp|username}}.
Nominator's rationale: As per gender neutrality guidelines, gender-specific categories are not appropriate where gender is not specifically related to the topic. This subcategory also creates the unfortunate side effect that Category:American novelists contains only male novelists. neilk (talk) 19:36, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
I just want to register my objection to the striking out of the two votes. These are people who have bothered to get involved. By pushing them out of this conversation, you are contributing to the continuing inability for newcomers to feel comfortable here. Especially women. Which is of course, the subject of the article being discussed. These are primarily contributions from new editors who were outraged by the sexism implicit in removing women from the novelist category. This move went viral on Facebook, and of the hundreds posting on Facebook, these are the three or four who have taken the time to try to take part in the Misplaced Pages process. By summarily negating their voices, you are just making it worse. --Theredproject (talk) 23:25, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
Well, who took this to facebook? If this was raised there, then the votes are probably a result of WP:Canvas violations and that would support pointing this out and discounting those !votes. In the end, the closing admin will determine how much weigh each comment merits in the decision. Vegaswikian (talk) 23:45, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
The Huffington Post or Twitter may be the reason for this being on Facebook. jonkerz ♠talk 23:58, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
Nope, this one started on FB, with Elissa Schappell's wall post, which has now been shared many many times. Huffpo is doing what they do best: repackaging someone else's story. Why or how people got interested in getting involved isn't important. What is important is that they are engaged in this question, want to make a contrib to wikipedia, and are being pushed away. And regarding Canvas, there were many many links to the talk page, and this discussion, telling folks that the way to engage with wikipedia is not to "contact the authorities" but to engage in a discussion.--Theredproject (talk) 00:19, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
When first thing you do after joining Misplaced Pages community is voting (!) on discussion page, it is not contributing, it is meat puppetry. Know the difference. Netrat (talk) 10:21, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
An article about a problem on Misplaced Pages which does not ask people to vote (or !vote) is not canvasing. Misplaced Pages is not a silo and articles which get people more involved are a good thing. RoyLeban (talk) 05:46, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
I'll agree with RoyLeban here. If you have an objective of getting more people to participate in Misplaced Pages, striking out the opinions of people new to Misplaced Pages is the wrong way to go about it. Belittling and devaluing the contributions of new editors is pretty much guaranteed to make sure that they'll never contribute again. Geoffrey.landis (talk) 12:32, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
I know Bloomcity and Ojeffs, they are real people who each have only one account. Is there a way I can provide evidence of this? --Jmcdon10 (talk) 14:23, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Knowing them is nice. As noted in the analysis here, those accounts have been blocked as socks. Given this and the likelihood that at least one other account could be a sock, the closing admin will have to deal with these issues and not you. Vegaswikian (talk) 18:03, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The point, as discussed in the New York Times, is that women are being removed from the category of "American Novelists" and placed into Category:American women novelists. Geoffrey.landis (talk)
The "point" is a foolish one, as a subcategory is part of the parent (and is found as a subcategory on any search for the parent, another silly point). I don't see anyone complaining about Category:Pulitzer Prize for the Novel winners being subcategorised. Oculi (talk) 11:55, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The "point" is that women are being removed from the category of American Novelists and men aren't. This is explicit sexism. Not even a borderline case: it is completely unambiguous sexism.
You are wrong. You are welcome to move all the biographies of male novelists to Category:American men novelists Netrat (talk) 07:07, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Your "point" is missing the point. If all the novelists had been removed from "Category:Pulitzer Prizes" but every other prize winner was still listed there by name, yes, that would have been discriminatory against novelists. When you remove women, but not men from the category, that's pretty clearly discriminatory.Geoffrey.landis (talk) 12:42, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The women novelists should all be merged; as for the other women by occupation categories, that needs to be determined on a case-by-case basis. There are a few discussions in the history where it was decided to keep actors and actresses in separate categories, for instance. As a general principle, if there is a "female X" category there should be a "male X" category, rather than "women X" being a subcategory of X. neilk (talk) 01:30, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
I think you have it right when you said "case by case" rather than generalizing "if there is female X, there should be male X." There is a legitimate academic interest here in the "women X" subset; for other topics the legitimate academic interest might relate to nationality, ethnicity, religion, or sexual orientation. Categories must make sense on an intellectual level. There is no "one size fits all" general principle for these things. Carrite (talk) 16:40, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep. Removing female authors from the main American Novelists category is sexist. The American Novelists category should contain authors of both genders. However, it is also useful to have American Women Novelists and American Men Novelist subcategories, in addition to the main category. Salspaugh
  • Merge and keep. Removing women from the list of novelists is like removing black or foreign-born novelists. Its effect is inherently biased. For those who want to find women novelists, a sublist is acceptable, but it cannot fairly involve removal from the main list. The effect is too discriminatory and drastic. The same applies to all women-nationality lists (not only novelists). I think this kind of category, based on the characteristics of the novelist, is very different from a subcategory based on the characteristics of the novels, e.g., mystery novelists or science fiction novelists. Zaslav (talk) 01:06, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
    • You must be new to Misplaced Pages. First, what is discussed here is a category and not a list. Lists and categories are different things on Misplaced Pages. Second, subcategorizing is not removing. Netrat (talk) 10:45, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep. I think having a sublist of female authors (and male authors, for that matter) for those who might find that information useful is a great idea. However, you can't call one of those lists "American Authors" and the other "American Women Authors". Either have one list "American Authors" with sublists "American Women Authors" and "American Men Authors," or just have the main list ungendered. Bafleyanne (talk) 01:40, 25 April 2013 (UTC) Bafleyanne (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • Merge - You can either merge the "American Women Authors" into the entire category or add a category, "American Men Authors" and pull all of the men out as well. I would think that the same problem exists for the other nationalities. This is my first participation in such a discussion, though I've done a few minor edits before. So I'm not sure of the etiquette. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bikeknit (talkcontribs) 01:17, 25 April 2013 (UTC) Bikeknit (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
Partially agree This actually touches on a very good point that I didn't consider. The necessary difference between this categorization and others like ethnicity is that this is based on a binary. Short of a category containing nothing but subcategories, exploiting a binary like gender requires that one take precedence over another. The method by which one category takes significance over another, no matter how it is decided, is highly troubling when applied to gender. Inarius (talk) 02:24, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. Now that I see there's a CfD and looking at the gender neutrality guidelines, I don't see a compelling case for a category of writers who are women. Feminist writers deserve a separate category, as maybe would writers about women's issues, but I don't think gender alone can be justified here for a subcategory.
That said, is it better to leave the subcategory as-is for now and let a bot do the cleanup (assuming such is necessary) after the discussion wraps up? There are editors adding the "American writers" category to every article in "American women writers". —C.Fred (talk) 01:23, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep - this is embarrassing us on a global basis. If you don't segregate males and gender unknowns, then don't segregate women (and that's how it's being perceived). --Orange Mike | Talk 01:26, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep: Obviously these women writers should not be removed from the main page. It may however by useful for some purposes to have easy access to gender-based lists (as for other qualities of writers, including religion, nationality, etc.): so we should have a sublist for American Men Novelists as well. (Note that significant traffic may also be driven by the recent article in the New York Times about this. Mundart (talk) 01:44, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Mundart, FYI the comments on the talk page, and this thread began after Filipacchi's Facebook post, but well before the Huffington Post article, or her own NYT article were published.--Theredproject (talk) 01:51, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge: I can see a significance for the category, but that significance has not been given so this category need not exist. Intersections by ethnicity, gender, religion and sexuality must be significant enough to warrant "a substantial and encyclopedic head article (not just a list)" for the category. Until that head article is written, this category has the reasonable potential for negative connotation and should be merged and removed. --Inarius (talk) 02:08, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep: I think it's useful to see individual categories by sex of writer, but women should absolutely not be removed from the list of American novelists. It's disgraceful that this stealthy recategorizing of women into "the distaff side" of novelists got this far to begin with. JLeland (talk) 02:33, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • As pointed out in the New York Times op-ed www.nytimes.com/2013/04/28/opinion/sunday/wikipedias-sexism-toward-female-novelists.html, removing women (bur not men) the category of "American Novelists" on the basis that women (but not men) should be in a subcategory is rather blatently sexist. I suggest immediately going through the Category:American women novelists files and putting every one of these back into the "American Novelist" category since (self evidently, I hope!) all American women novelists are also American Novelists.
Whether, after this is done, this category should then be deleted is a separate issue, on which I have no opinion. Geoffrey.landis (talk)
  • Merge and keep.(edit conflict) I can see both sides of the argument here. I can see why having a subcategory for women novelists might be a good idea, especially given that there are entire courses devoted to women's literature (and of course then we could subdivide by national/ethnic origin ("African-American female novelists"), sexuality ("Lesbian Ameican novelists") for the same reasons). But it should not require that we exclude all women from the main category, not when we gave it a gender-neutral name.

    The appropriate precedent is Category:American basketball players and Category:African-American basketball players, where it was decided to use both categories even though "African-American" indicates nationality as well. Daniel Case (talk) 02:49, 25 April 2013 (UTC)

  • Just for the record, as the person who originally wrote most of WP:CATGRS, I can clarify that this very situation is exactly why that policy always contained an explicit proscription against ghettoizing people: a subcategory for women or racial minority or LGBT practitioners of an occupation was not supposed to be created unless the category was already completely diffusable on other criteria as well. For example, Category:American women writers is acceptable, because all writers are supposed to be subcatted by their particular kind of writing instead of appearing directly in Category:American writers — and thus the women-specific subcategory isn't preventing women from being categorized directly alongside men who were also American writers, but rather is supplementing other categories which keep men and women together. But Category:American women novelists was not supposed to exist, because Category:American novelists isn't realistically diffusable on other criteria — so the women-specific subcategory has the effect of replacing rather than supplementing categories which keep men and women together, thus turning the main category into a men-only grouping with women hived off into their own separate corner. If this kind of grouping is desired, it should be done either in list form or by manually generating a category intersection for Category:American novelists + Category:American women writers — but it should not exist as its own separate category. Gendered categories are useful in certain circumstances, certainly — but any situation in which women get a gendered subcategory while men are still left in the ungendered parent category is never one of them, and the policy around gendered categories has always been quite clear about that. Merge per nom. Bearcat (talk) 02:41, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge as a non-notable intersection that has the unfortunate side-effect of othering and inappropriately ghettoizing its subjects. —David Eppstein (talk) 02:58, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep - bad faith nomination to single out the American category. Nominate all or nominate none. --Mais oui! (talk) 03:10, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • It is not bad faith to start with one problem rather than trying to attack every single similar problem on Misplaced Pages at the same time. Yes, other categories should also be fixed. RoyLeban (talk) 05:46, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Note to closing Admin - that comment let's the cat out of the bag. This is clearly a strategy to try to delete an entire category system by a concerted attack on a single member. This has become far too common over the past year at CFD, and must be nipped in the bud by Sysops.--Mais oui! (talk) 07:56, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Objection: This is the Slippery Slope Fallacy. Fixing this case is, if anything, a precedent for fixing other cases of discriminatory sexism (splitting an evenly-distributed binary such as gender into a "normal, no need to state which it is" and "the other one" implies inferiority). It does not provide precedent for getting rid of any and all categorisations, even on gender, where those are both neutrally done (calling out both explicitly, rather than just one) and merited by the subject matter. For writing in general, where gender distribution is itself an area of sociological and literary study (which is at least an indicator of relevance), it is; for novels, I understand that no such indicators exist, and thus it is not - Merge. If there are, "Merge and Keep", by creating an "American Men Novelists" sibling category. 2620:0:1040:203:BAAC:6FFF:FE86:1ADE (talk) 10:22, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Note to closing Admin It's clear that Mais oui is has a strategy to use fallacious arguments to continue a sexist practice. By attacking the nomination as bad faith, by accusing me of having some hidden strategy, they have assumed bad faith. In fact, I have no strategy whatsoever, and I have no relationship to the nominator. When I become aware of problems, especially really bad ones like this, I speak up. There are a million problems like this on Misplaced Pages. The fact that other problems exist does not mean we shouldn't fix this problem (hopefully that sounds familiar). In fact, we should work to fix all the problems. But we can't fix them all at the same time. RoyLeban (talk) 06:21, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep To build on Bearcat's comment, I don't see a problem with the sub-category. I see a problem with the parent category. The list of American novelists is far too long, and by itself I think it's useless. Really, how do you navigate a list with 3,000 to 4,000 entries? I'd vote for completely clearing out the "American novelists" category and properly placing everyone in a sub-category. There already exist numerous genre-specific categories, and if necessary an additional "American Generic Fiction Writers" category could be created for people that don't belong to any existing genre (i.e. American fantasy writers). Assuming all American novelists are correctly placed in at least one sub-category, then the parent category is redundant and the women category is ok (given that said women are also categorized in the genre specific categories). --SlowWalkere (talk) 03:14, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge - this is clearly a ghettoization problem, though there could be a limited case for keeping it as a sub-category (additive, not as a replacement). All the rest of Category:Women novelists by nationality should be checked to make sure we don't have this problem in other nationality lists as well. Kate (talk) 05:25, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge per nom and Bearcat's nuanced explanation of the issue. -- Green Cardamom (talk) 05:27, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge I agree with the nomination and also with Bearcat's comments. And with the New York Times Op-Ed piece = it's sexist. It also increases the (correct) view that we are male-dominated and that doesn't help us get female editors. Dougweller (talk) 05:31, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge, duh it's a no brainer. The idea that Misplaced Pages should be inaccurate or sexist or biased because a category is too large is a really bad argument, especially since anyone who thinks the category is too large now will still think its too large when all the women have been removed. What happens next? Removing the men whose last name begins with S into an American male novelists whose names begin with S and then removing them from American novelists. After all, you're not an American novelist if your name begins with an S. To those who argue that a bonus category for American women/female novelists is useful, a much better solution is to allow you to view the pages that are in the intersection of two categories. Someone should add that to MediaWiki. And there should absolutely not be an American women/female novelists category unless there is also an American men/male novelists category. RoyLeban (talk) 05:46, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • I'm not the one who didn't read WP:Cat gender. The very first line says "A gender-specific category could be implemented where gender has a specific relation to the topic" (emphasis mine). Where is that specific relationship here? Their chromosomes? If a specific relationship exists for women, then I would contend it also exists for men. If there is no specific relationship for men, then there is none for women. Period. There is just as much a specific relationship for women as there is for American novelists over 6' tall. Obviously, tall people have a different perspective which affects how they write. Should we move them out too and remove them from the American novelists category? Of course not. If you want a category for novelists who write about women's issues, or men's issues, or write mysteries, etc., that would make sense, because what novelists right and what they write about does have a specific relation to the topic at hand. And guess what? Those categories already exist and they overlap with lists of novelists by country. Of course they do. You wouldn't say someone isn't an American novelist because they write mysteries. RoyLeban (talk) 06:40, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Merge I agree does not conform to gender neutrality guidelines, and creates the side effect of a Male Only main page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ktsetsi (talkcontribs) 12:56, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment: I have created a number of articles on 19th century American novelists, some of whom happened to be female. It NEVER occurred to me to look for a "female novelist" category, though I see some of the ones I wrote were later categorized so by other editors. Its stupid. We either have two categories for female and male, or none.--Milowent 13:08, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge Bearcat has eloquently and clearly stated the problems with retaining this category. Shawn in Montreal (talk) 13:16, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep I'm perfectly fine with a list of American Women Novelists. I'm FURIOUS about removing them from the list of American novelists. Chip Unicorn (talk) 14:07, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge at it is unambiguous sexism. fraise (talk) 14:10, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep This is a terrible story for Misplaced Pages and is making the community look bad. People do study and seek out "women writers" for a variety of reasons, so that page should be kept, but the "American authors" page should include *all* American authors of note. Wichitalineman (talk) 14:11, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Merge It would actually be okay IF it was a subset of the Category:American novelists but removing them from that category is a clear violation the gender neutrality guidelines, and is also bizarre. --Jmcdon10 (talk) 14:16, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
It IS a subset of the Category:American novelists. Netrat (talk) 11:12, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge I recognize the fact that this category is a sub-category and articles should be tagged with both, but the actual practice has not been as clear as the rule, and now women are being removed from the main category which will continue regardless of how many times we reiterate that rule. In light of the bad press we are getting, which I recognize shouldn't dictate policy to us but it does give a sense of urgency for the resolution, and the general consensus that I see emerging I think we can WP:SNOW.Coffeepusher (talk) 14:20, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge Many have made the obvious point that, whether or not there is a category of American Women Novelists, it's grotesque to be removing women from American Novelists. But I don't see anyone making the more fundamental point. As soon as you create a subcategory of "American Woman Novelists" without also creating a subcategory of "American Man Novelists," you reveal that you think being male is the norm and being female is different, or exceptional. Likewise when you set apart "African-American Novelists", etc., but not "White American Novelists". Of course this applies across Misplaced Pages, not just for Americans and novelists. JGleick (talk) 14:30, 25 April 2013 (UTC) Joyce Carol Oates (the American Novelist) makes the same point here.
  • Merge I am flabbergasted that there is even a discussion about this. Removing women from the main category is pure unadulterated sexism. It is the same as removing black authors, or blue eyed authors. The category "American men novelists" was just created and currently has only two entries. No one would think to put Orson Scott Card only in a male specific category.
When J. K. Rowling first published, she choose to use her initials, instead of her full name, reportedly because of concern that sexism would affect sales. If she wasn't so successful, many would not know if she was a man or a woman. Putting her only in a "woman's" list, would make it impossible for someone to find her in a male only novelist's list.
Saying that the category is too long, and some entries that fit some sub-category should be moved out is absurd. There is nothing wrong with keeping a subcategory for women authors, or black, or American or whatever, but they should not be moved out of the main category. EricKent (talk) 14:38, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
There is something wrong with categorizing articles both under a category and its subcategory, it ruins the very concept of categories. Netrat (talk) 11:18, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
If there were an article American Presidents Who Died in Office, is it inappropriate to leave those presidents in the category American Presidents? Jodie (talk) 15:54, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge I agree does not conform to gender neutrality guidelines, and creates the side effect of a Male Only main page.Scorcha79 (talk) 15:04, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep: Not having American women novelists on the main American novelists page is sexist and disgraceful. However, worth keeping as a subcategory to facilitate users' research on American womens' literature. Rinne na dTrosc (talk) 15:08, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep. It's great to have a separate list of "women novelists" -- people do look for such things -- but having that list override an author's membership in "novelists" is inarguably ghettoization. Serpyllum (talk) 15:16, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep: Subcategories for men and women seem fine, but neither should be removed from the default category. I agree with others who have stated that pruning the default category should be done by characteristics of the works of the author (such as genre) rather than characteristics of the author (such as gender or race). Lateralus1587 (talk)
  • Keep- create "American men novelists", and move all the men over. In this way the two genders are treated equally and an overstuffed category branches nicely. Rklawton (talk) 15:28, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
I disagree that an "American Men Novelists" category solves the problem. The more general category is necessary precisely because people do not look for novels by the gender of the author. They look for novels. To split and empty the larger category in favor of two gender-based categories implies that the gender of the author is the single most important distinction in a work of fiction, which is simply not so. Artemis-Arethusa (talk) 15:49, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge Teemu Leisti (talk) 15:52, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep: Subcategories are fine but women should absolutely not be arbitrarily erased from the list of novelists in the unnecessary interest of "trimming the length". It seems suspicious that the response to this perceived problem was to start by removing women. --lainzilla (talk) 15:59, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge I agree does not conform to gender neutrality guidelines, and all female-only categories should be eliminated. --Mattbucher (talk) 16:09, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep. Many great comments.--Brad Patrick (talk) 16:16, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep. Bearcat is correct. Women novelists should not be removed from the category of American novelists. And yet it is valuable to be able to identify women writers. Why not merge them back in, and yet add another category to identify women, as that is clearly valuable meta information? Also, this is being framed as a correction of some past decision to move women en masse out of the American novelists category. I can't find any evidence of that happening. So, the merge request, if it doesn't keep the "women" categories, may have the undesirable side effect of erasing much hard work to identify women as women authors. Strong KEEP! --Lizzard (talk) 16:20, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep Clearly an undesirable gender imbalance retaining this (sub)category without moving them back and adding male novelists to the men equivalent . Mootros (talk) 16:27, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep with the explicit understanding that future removal of the subset of female novelists from the superset of American novelists should be regarded as actionable. Carrite (talk) 16:33, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Procedural close Why would you nominate just this one category and ignore the scheme at Category:Women_novelists_by_nationality? —Justin (koavf)TCM16:40, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Also I just looked back over the spammy votes at the beginning and due to the media scrutiny on this categorization scheme, I recommend closing this discussion and starting a new one about the parent scheme of women novelists by nationality tomorrow or possibly after 48 hours. —Justin (koavf)TCM16:42, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The issue relates to the exclusion of those included in the American Women Novelists category from the American Novelists category, a really bad decision by somebody. The answer isn't to remove the subcategory, it's to reinclude those falling in the subcategory into the larger category. Carrite (talk) 16:45, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Merge I agree does not conform to gender neutrality guidelines, and creates the side effect of a Male Only main page. --Lexinatrix (talk) 16:51, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep Removing female authors from the main American Novelists category is sexist. The American Novelists category should contain authors of both genders. However, it is also useful to have an American Women Novelists and American Men Novelist subcategories, in addition to the main category. Salpsaugh —Preceding undated comment added 17:07, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep and Merge Removal from the original list is a bad idea, but the list as a subcategory for those interested in researching American women novelists. Keep the list, but also merge all back into the main list (American novelists). Whether to put it under Women novelists by nationality is a good question, too. --Synaptophysin (talk) 17:16, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep as is People totally are misunderstanding categorization with their arguments here. Anyway, the people making these arguments are making outrage out of nothing. The general rule is that articles should be in only the most applicable category. There is no reason to put an article in both a general category and a subcategory. The rhetoric about "back of the bus" is just toally misunderstanding the whole issue. To put people in both categories creates needless category clutter. If people can not be bothered to click on subcategories that is their problem. The idea that we should put people in both categories will lead to having way too many categorizes on some people. Simplicity is the best appraoch, and simplicity means that we just use one category. Also all the rhetoric about "list" is wrong. Categories are not lists. We have all sorts of sub-cats of Category:American novelists and we should not be putting people in both the main category and the sub-category. The tendency of some editors to do so is what makes that a problem. I really think it is way out of line for people to try to turn this into some cause of war, as people have done by writting articles about it. That mainly shows people just do not understand how categorization works. We do not put articles in all applicable categories, only in the most specifically relevant ones. Attempts to mandate multiple levels of categories just lead to massive overcategorization that is not helpful to anyone.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:46, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
It is unfortunate that Misplaced Pages:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality no longer has the clear guidance regarding diffusion that it used to. But basically, the problem is that (1) inclusion within ethnic, gender, religion, & sexuality intersectional categories is appropriate, where those categories are "recognized as a distinct and unique cultural topic in its own right" -- for instance, women writers, African American scientists; but (2) diffusion into those subcategories is inappropriate, because it serves to ghettoize. So the appropriate solution is that for those folks who have relevant cultural identities (like "woman writer") have that intersectional category as well as the appropriate super-category. --Lquilter (talk) 22:49, 25 April 2013 (UTC
The argument posed by John Pack Lambert is an example of throwing barriers of technicality. An example of confusing people with machines. And 'limit the discussion to "those who 'understand these things' ". All that is missing is a 'pat on the head' and holding out a dish towel. And a whiff of 'ownership'. Neonorange (talk) 02:01, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment I would totally support creation of Category:American male novelists or a similarly named category. I think that would actually be a workable solution. As it is we seperate out Category:American women writers from Category:American writers we do not put people in both categories. The attempts to make this into a fight zone are very disturbing to me.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:46, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Procedural objection The objections here would actually apply to Category:American women writers and Category:Novelists by nationality. No one has presented any reason to treat this category differently than those. Well, other than some person who wants to influence wikipedia policy has decided to instead of directly seeking change in the normal ways sought to use outside sources to cause scandal and get people to react to it. We have for a very long time had Category:American women writers and no one has objected to it. We should not respond to such pressure tactics that ignore the way we actually run categories.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:49, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment People are not removed from the novelists categories, they are put in sub-categories thereof. All this rhetoric about "removal" is ignorin how categories actually work.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:50, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge Gender neutrality. No reason I can see to categorize them differently. I don't see a Category:American male novelists. – Muboshgu (talk) 17:51, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment The point of the articles involved seems to be to attack those of us who try to avoid too many categories. In fact, much of the work on creating this category was done by moving people in Category:Women novelists to specific nationalit based sub-cats. That category had stood for years, but was unreasonably large while at the same time covering only a very small percentage of women novelists. I have to say that I am quite glad in a way that my work has become widely recognized, even if it is by people who do not understand it and attack it. TThe fact of the matter is because women and underrepresentied in writitng, being a woman writer is notable, and we thus categorize by that. Creating sub-cats does not remove people from a category, and categories are not lists. The whole outrage over this comes from not understanding how categories work. The fact of the matter is that creating these sub-categories make things much easier for people who want to study women in writing.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:56, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Comment While this is a useful general rule for categories, it does not and cannot always apply. If Misplaced Pages editors (as you suggest) "do not understand" how categories work, neither will the general public. Having an "American Novelists" page that has only men looks extremely odd to any general reader. Sometimes there are good reasons to have overlapping categories, and this is one of those cases. Economy should not trump clear understanding or usefulness.Wichitalineman (talk) 18:09, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
      • I second that. "The whole world is reading me wrong" is rarely sensible: the whole world won't change just because it is being inconvenient to one person. But it's an especially bad approach for an encyclopedia, the whole point of which is to be broadly useful. William Pietri (talk) 18:27, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
      • Comment Are John Pack Lambert's personal Mormon beliefs getting in the way of his gender neutrality? Looking at his edits, he seems to be a repeat offender when it comes to ghettoizing women into secondary, separate, and implied-to-be-lesser categories. Editors must be impartial and this is disturbing.Claudelemonde (talk) 23:07, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
    • It sounds like you're saying that all members of a subcategory are conceptually members of the main category. That may well be true, but the current Misplaced Pages interface doesn't reflect that clearly. Instead, the current interface shows a list of subcategories and a list of members of the main category. If you want to change the Misplaced Pages interface so that it shows all members of all subcategories, that might be an interesting way to resolve this--but it would mean that high-level categories might have millions of items on their category pages. At any rate, with the current Misplaced Pages interface, the strong implication of the way things are presented is that the list of category members at the bottom of a category page is a comprehensive list. So when you remove entries from that list, then yes, it comes across as implying that they aren't full members of the main category. --Elysdir (talk) 21:51, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. As aforementioned, if you must have seperate categories, don't make male writers the default - Make 'male' and 'female' writers categories. Doing otherwise would contravene the gender neutrality guidelines, and incidentally be as sexist as all hell. You shouldn't define only women by their gender. -Netchiman (talk) 8:20, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep The creation of a subcategory as American women novelists is a good idea. But moving women novelist’s names from the main American novelists page looks biased.Else another category as american male novelists can be created and the main list can be kept in its original state.--Napithakrish (talk) 17:59, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. Alternatively, create an American men novelists category and move all American novelists into either American men novelists or American women novelists wherever their gender is known to be one or the other. Klausness (talk) 18:11, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
We actually do have Category:American men novelists.John Pack Lambert (talk) 18:23, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Now we do. It was only just created, in response to all this. -GTBacchus 18:48, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
You are confusing a list with a category. They are not the same.
I don't think John Pack Lambert is confusing a list with a category. From his comment here, it looks like he is very Misplaced Pages-savvy and knows what he's doing. It's NYTime author who's confusing a list with a category. Netrat (talk) 11:40, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
    • That people are using the encyclopedia differently than you'd like them to doesn't make them disingenuous. I think her critique is reasonable. Whether or not there are other places on Misplaced Pages that one can get an ungendered list of novelists doesn't matter. If one looks at us as they did, which is a reasonable use case, then Misplaced Pages looks to be ghettoizing the female writers. It shouldn't. William Pietri (talk) 18:35, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment Since we have Category:American men novelists, I would say many of the previous comments are based on faulty understanding of the actual issues invovled.John Pack Lambert (talk) 18:25, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Given that the category you mention dates to 25 April, while the discussion here dates to 24 April, for most of the period of this discussion we in fact did not have the category mentioned.
An example of this is Hailey Abbott who is in Category:American women novelists and Category:American romantic fiction writers, the later is a sub-cat of Category:American novelists.John Pack Lambert (talk) 19:04, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
John, just because you've been categorizing some of these articles, no one is saying you were being "sexist" despite the drama of the NYTimes op piece, it was just well-intentioned category creep. Filipacchi's whole point is that subcategorization of only women is ghettoization, and not what is permitted per Bearcat's comments.--Milowent 19:09, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Wait for consensus. This issue is currently being discussed on the parent category's talk page. Until that discussion is resolved and the immediate situation addressed, we should not make dractic changes to these categories. -- LWG 19:24, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
LWG, do you mean the talk page for American Women Novelists or the one for American Novelists? Is there an official priority/hierarchy between discussions on talk pages, versus discussions on CfD pages? Especially as this thread seems longer and in ways, more robust than the other two.--Theredproject (talk) 20:07, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The discussion at American Novelists is addressing the overall issue of male/female subcats and how to address them, and the outcome there will affect individual cases like this one. I have no problem moving that discussion here or whatever, but we shouldn't decide on action here if the opposite action is going to be decided there. -- LWG 20:50, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
The problematic article is Category:American women novelists This is the proper place to discuss the problem. To move the discussion would raise barriers to participation. Neonorange (talk) 01:48, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Request for Information. John Pack Lambert insists over and over here that most of us "do not understand" "how categories work," and that a principle of economy dictates that any given Misplaced Pages entry should appear in as few, or as few overlapping, categories as possible. I'd appreciate it if I could be directed to the policy discussions that explain why this is so and how it was decided. It seems quite unclear to me that we operate this way, and if I look at the pages for important entities (e.g. The Beatles), I find them listed with numerous overlapping and hierarchically-inclusive categories, which allow me to explore based on any entries. It seems to me that the principle of maximal inclusion rather than minimal inclusion is most helpful to users, but it appears I have missed an important community decision about how categories function and I'd like to read more about the policy before commenting further. Wichitalineman (talk) 19:57, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages:Categorization_and_subcategories#Subcategorization:

A page or category should rarely be placed in both a category and a subcategory or parent category (supercategory) of that category (however, see directly below). For example, the article "Paris" need only be placed in "Category:Cities in France", not in both "Category:Cities in France" and "Category:Populated places in France". Since the first category is in the second category, readers are already given the information that Paris is a populated place in France by it being a city in France.

Note also that as stub templates are for maintenance purposes, not user browsing (see #Misplaced Pages administrative categories above), they do not count as categorization for the purposes of Misplaced Pages's categorization policies. An article which has a "stubs" category on it must still be filed in the most appropriate content categories, even if one of them is a direct parent of the stubs category in question.

Hope this helps. Netrat (talk) 12:01, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
There is more specific discussion of this problem at the Misplaced Pages guideline page Misplaced Pages:Categorization/Ethnicity, gender, religion and sexuality, which I've quoted below (labelled "Relevant Guideline).--Carwil (talk) 13:16, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
"Relevant Guideline" is relevant to entirely different topic than rised by Wichitalineman. What Wichitalineman asked was where "don't include an article into partent category and child category at the same time" policy comes from. Netrat (talk) 15:27, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep. I approve of having a sub-category that identifies women novelists, but not their removal from the American novelists category generally. Removing American women novelists from Category:American novelists implies that they are somehow deservedly excluded as American novelists. This seems to violate gender neutrality guidelines. I also agree with those who have pointed out that gender, unlike nationality or ethnicity or genre, is a binary. Amphiggins (talk) 20:03, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
"I also agree with those who have pointed out that gender, unlike nationality or ethnicity or genre, is a binary." Seriously? Perhaps you should visit the Category:Gender category - it might blow your mind. You're the second or third person in this argument who has called gender a binary variable. There's a lot more than just "men" and "women" in this world...--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 04:02, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • delete entire Category:Women novelists by nationality tree and upmerge into Category:Novelists by nationality tree. JPL is absolutely correct that having separate categories for women novelists elsewhere implies doing the same in the USA category structure. It can be argued, though, that this is a triple intersection (woman/novelist/country) and therefore is discouraged. In the longer run we need to bite the bullet over whether sex is notable in writing any longer. At any rate the solution of double-listing the women in both levels needs to be absolutely excluded. Mangoe (talk) 20:09, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment. Having read the Misplaced Pages:Categorization page more carefully, I am wondering whether the issue here is not at all the one we have been debating, but rather two linked separate issues. If it's true that "American Women Novelists" is a formal subcategory of "American Novelists," and therefore everyone voting for "merge" is actually voting for things to remain as they are (without most of us realizing it!), then the questions are 1) Why does the current page template not display the inclusive higher-level categories as well as finer-grained subcategories (ie, why don't women writers display both the "American Women Novelists" and "American Novelists" links in their footers; 2) Why do the pages for the high-level categories not inherently include all the subcategorized members that belong to them? Wichitalineman (talk) 20:32, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge - and quickly. And then let discussion proceed. Some errors are too egregious to permit to stand. The effect of having a separate category 'just for women' while keeping a higher category that leaks authors into the segegated category is exactly what it seems: non encyclopedic, sexist, and a public relations disaster. Neonorange (talk) 20:43, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
    Oddly enough, we do exactly that for many sportsperson categories. I have tried in the past, and met with a lot of resistance, to rectify that. Yet here, when it involves authors, the outcry is immediate. I am puzzled. Powers 21:00, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge this one and all others like it or Create separate category system for male novelists and/or non-categorizable novelists The problem as I see it is not that there is a category tree for women novelists but that there is one for women but not for men. So we have two equally valid solutions: Either we delete the women-related category tree (and all similar ones) or we create a new tree for men novelists and keep Category:American novelists and similar ones solely as a top-category that only contains sub-categories but no articles. Personally, I think both solutions are valid but I'd actually rather favor the second approach: Most subjects will fall into one of the current sub-categories and should be placed there anyway (SciFi-novelists into Category:American science fiction writers, thriller-writers into Category:American thriller writers etc.) while we can sort the rest that does not fit into any sub-category into either Category:American women novelists and Category:American men novelists or a new Category:American novelists without clear genre (or similar). This solution would not only avoid the whole sexist distinction we currently make but it would also benefit the readers who after all should find categories useful to navigate articles. Regards SoWhy 20:58, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge - what, is this the middle ages where women are a subcategory of humanity instead of just people? They are American Novelists. You cannot catigorise like this. Many have their own pages so if you're unsure of their gender you can always link through to their main page. There is no way to justify this separation. 188.221.73.75 (talk) 21:11, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep: It is reasonable to have "male" and "female" American novelist subcategories but the main category of "American Novelists" should be gender-neutral. Not sure why this should be so difficult to understand. Trixi72 (talk) 21:35, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep Obviously the category "American novelists" should not consist of only male novelists as it says nothing about gender or sex in the label - it is gender neutral. The category "American women novelists" should be kept because it is a "recognized as a distinct and unique cultural topic in its own right" (as WP:EGRS specifies). American women novelists are the topic of university courses and women writers often have their own sections in bookstores. This is a recognized subdivision in the study of literature and in the popular imagination. Wadewitz (talk) 21:36, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. As per gender neutrality guidelines, gender-specific categories are not appropriate where gender is not specifically related to the topic. This subcategory also creates the unfortunate side effect that Category:American novelists contains only male novelists. 24.151.50.173 (talk) 22:03, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge: While I can appreciate the logic behind keeping the category for authors whose gender is especially relevant, it's hard to imagine that this won't just become a magnet for every American woman to write a novel, the same way that "In popular culture" subheds might initially contain some worthwhile content but inevitably turn into listcruft. — Bdb484 (talk) 22:06, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep. No rationale has been offered for removing the American category while keeping the other 50 subcats of Category:Women novelists by nationality. We should either upmerge Category:Women novelists by nationality in its entirety or keep it all.
    Also, please note that if the nominated category is upmerged, it should be merged to both parents: the other is Category:American women writers. Per the head article Women's writing in English, women's writing is a distinct area of literary study, and the novel is a very important literary form in that field of study. Per Misplaced Pages:Cat gender, "a gender-specific category could be implemented where gender has a specific relation to the topic" ... and in this case it has a very specific relation to the topic. Please note that many of the arguments raised at Misplaced Pages:Categories for discussion/Log/2007 March 23#Category:Women_writers are relevant here. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 22:33, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep - The Category:American women novelists subcategory is a perfectly appropriate national subcategory of Category:Women novelists by nationality, and Category:Women novelists is a well-defined topic and cultural concept, "recognized as a distinct and unique cultural topic in its own right" (Misplaced Pages:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality). As I wrote above, the solution is for articles to be categorized in both appropriate categories. (Repeat: It is unfortunate that Misplaced Pages:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality no longer has the clear guidance regarding diffusion that it used to. But basically, the problem is that (1) inclusion within ethnic, gender, religion, & sexuality intersectional categories is appropriate, where those categories are "recognized as a distinct and unique cultural topic in its own right" -- for instance, women writers, African American scientists; but (2) diffusion into those subcategories is inappropriate, because it serves to ghettoize. So the appropriate solution is that for those folks who have relevant cultural identities (like "woman writer") have that intersectional category as well as the appropriate super-category.)--Lquilter (talk) 22:49, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep An author's gender is undoubtedly relevant to their notability in numerous circumstances. Do I really need to explain that one?--The Devil's Advocate tlk. cntrb. 23:22, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep - It is my belief that female novelists should appear in the parent category; however, as has been pointed out, many people study specifically woman-authored literature. This entire discussion seems to me more of a problem with categories themselves than with this particular category. Not that categorization should be eliminated, but perhaps it would be more useful to automatically display ALL entries in the parent category, not just those specifically assigned to it. Or, as others have suggested, allowing users to search for the intersection of multiple categories. That is, rather than having a specific subcategory for "American women novelists", Misplaced Pages should have the categories "Americans", "women", and "novelists", and a user could search for pages which fall under all three categories. Lunaibis 23:53, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
This is a good idea, although people at Semantic Mediawiki have been working for years on an interface and backend that would make this possible. It is a very complicated technical problem, made all the more difficult by the massive size of Misplaced Pages, the number of potential categories and category members, the speed at which editing takes place, and the relatively small number of servers that Misplaced Pages runs on (compared to Google, Facebook, etc.) The current system was designed on a shoestring budget almost a long time ago, and it isn't ideal for sure. Stu 00:20, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep this category and Depopulate Category:American novelists, putting all articles in relevant sub-categories. A 4,000 member category is too big to be useful. Otherwise, if Category:American novelists remains populated with members, merge such that every article in this category is also in Category:American novelists. "Man is default, woman is different" is a longstanding societal problem, we shouldn't perpetuate it. Google takes "American novelists" to that category page, which should be kept in mind. Given that there is much confusion about whether and why subcategory members don't appear in parent category pages, we should think about the implications of this decision for how readers will view and interpret these pages. Stu 00:20, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep. The case for an exception to the general most-specific-category rule is pretty strong here, if only to avoid the misunderstandings that are on prominent display in the reporting on this issue. -- Visviva (talk) 00:46, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Creator - Merge - I'm the editor who created the category. I now feel the category should be merged to avoid further proving that Misplaced Pages appears institutionally sexist, and at a later date address category problems in an imaginative way per Lunaibis, BrownHairedGirl and Stu. I have also created many of the other women novelist, poet, and essayist nationality categories, which should be part of this discussion. I did this in good faith, I hoped for this to be an inspiration to young women to know how many others have written before. It was my eventual hope to have both male and female novelists categories as subcats of their respective nationality categories, as well as all combined in the general novelist category. This appears to be a normal practice in other professions, such as sport. Many general profession categories are just far too large to navigate. I regret not starting the male category when I created the women category. This has justifiably opened Misplaced Pages up to accusations of markedness. I opened this Pandora's box after noticing a tag requesting that the Category:British women poets be populated, it appals me that there are less Misplaced Pages articles on women poets than pornographic actresses, a depressing statistic that can never inspire young women. I do wish I had a right of reply to Amanda Filipacchi's NYT article. I sympathise utterly with her sentiments, in my lack of thoroughness in creating a male subcategory I have outraged the very people I wanted to inspire by initially creating a category for women, in a misguided attempt to shed light on women writers. I would tell Filipacchi and others decrying our awesome project that I have created many articles on significant women, and am proud to have created almost every article on albums by women jazz singers. I have delighted in raising awareness of neglected feminist icons such as Clementia Taylor and her Aubrey House, British Prime Minister's spouses, and some of our sadly most obscure female creatives such as Morwenna Donnelly and Dorothy Annan. It saddens me to see allegations of sexual assault and misconduct are demoted from biographical articles, I situation I expericed with Mohamed Al-Fayed, and first realised when finding the rape scene in Blade Runner written up as seduction. Misplaced Pages needs millions more female editors and editors from marginalised minorities. This should serve as a wake up call to all of us to create more content on marginalised figures, and invent more imaginative ways to navigate categories. Gareth E Kegg (talk) 00:57, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge but - given the Creator's statement above, I will go with his desires BUT in the longer term we should keep an eye on ways to more appropriately handle this. Women's literature is a legitimate area of study, and having such a subcategory should be of use... but it should never be the first subcategory that the writer is placed in. As long as the writer is placed first in a genre or similar subcategory, this would alleviate the concern that placing a person in a gender category is eliminating them from the main list (as they would already have been removed from there), and would encourage attention and building of the category system. She's a science fiction novelist and a women novelist; he's a satirical novelist and a 19th century novelist and a male novelist. --Nat Gertler (talk) 01:40, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
I agree with you - even the 'but'. Two days ought to be enough to correct the most egregious problem. And then the universe. As to the length argument raise by some comments above - at 4000 entries, the list is mostly a roster; subcategories will end up more used. But subcategories should not be created that result in an exclusive men's club at the top of the hierarchy. ...there are too many of those as is. Neonorange (talk) 02:14, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Delete. Good grief the news media is now chock full of outrage against this sexism, and Misplaced Pages is now an international laughingstock. If someone wants to make a List article of List of American Female Novelists, let that happen, but for heaven's sake don't segregate out novelists because of their gender. And who the heck named these categories, a three-year-old? "women novelists" and "men novelists"? Are you kidding me? Softlavender (talk) 02:36, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge or Move to American female novelists iff we create American male novelists I'm completely ambivalent between my two proposals, but having a category for female novelists, and not one for male novelists is foolish. Ryan Vesey 02:41, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
We have Category:American men novelists, so you are ignoring the situation we actually have.John Pack Lambert (talk) 02
57, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
On a broader note - the obvious misunderstandings demonstrated above of the intent of wikipedia's gender classification schemes in categories suggests that a broader conversation should be started after this closes, perhaps at Wikipedia_talk:Categorization/Ethnicity,_gender,_religion_and_sexuality and notifying Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Gender_Studies.
Nonetheless, for those who have repeatedly said "having one for female is silly when you don't have one for male", I point you to WP:Cat gender, which states "As another example, a female heads of government category is valid as a topic of special encyclopedic interest, though it does not need to be balanced directly against a "Male heads of government" category, as historically the vast majority of political leaders have been male by default." Misplaced Pages is chock *full* of categories where there is a female category without an equivalent male category, which to me makes "male" seem like the norm. And even though the guidelines state that females should not only be diffused but rather included in both cats (to avoid the ghettoization problem), this contraindicates every other categorization guideline, by which we always diffuse and don't keep cats in the parent - having a special exception for gender is just confusion (as you can see above) - and in any case people don't follow that guidance.
If you look at a similar discussion I started a little while back for Women and death, which I also felt seemed to indicate some sort of special relationship with death that women have whereas no-one had bothered to create Category:Men and death, you'll also notice that no-one is calling for a merge up to Category:Death. Here's another example: Category:Murderers by nationality - which has Category:Female murderers by nationality - although I seriously doubt such a category would merit a NY times article nor the accusations of sexism and bias shown above - but such sub-categorization does reinforce the "male" as normal and the female as "exceptional" - so I do hope that this guideline will be rewritten, and that we (almost) never ever again create a female cat in the absence of a male one.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 03:50, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Some interesting data:
Category name contains Number
"women" 8,177
"men" 6,006
"female" 1,946
"male" 1,201
And I just found another category to debate: Category:Male prostitutes by nationality but we have no equivalent Category:Female prostitutes by nationality. Oh dear...--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 04:17, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment As of a few minutes ago, we had finally added back all of the removed "American novelists" categories to all the women in the "American women novelists" category. But now JPL is re-doing his removals, despite clear consensus on this page and elsewhere that that was the wrong thing to do. It's not clear what's going to happen to the categories in the future, but it's absolutely clear to almost everyone here that the situation where only male authors are listed under the main category is a bad idea. So I'll repeat publicly what I just put on JPL's talk page: Please stop re-removing "American novelists". You're not helping. Now that we're back to where things were before your well-intentioned but ill-considered changes, please let the Misplaced Pages discussion process come to a decision about how to move forward. --Elysdir (talk) 04:25, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Actually, adding back removed "American novelists" categories was not helpful. It's double categorization what should be avoided. In any way you should have waited until this discussion is closed before changing actual articles. Even if there's a consensus on not having males in parent category and females in child category, there are more than one solution to do so. And JPL seems to be the most reasonable person in this whole discussion, please don't attack him. Netrat (talk) 12:50, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
The nomination has not closed. There is no consensus to do anything. Anyway the specific cases involved not only reversions of this specific category but other categories, and the total removal of this category. Categories that still exist should not be removed from people who clearly fit in the category. In fact what was done in those cases was an out-of-process, backhanded deletion of the category which is clearly against the norms of wikipedia.John Pack Lambert (talk) 04:38, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. I've been making this argument for six years, and I see no reason to stop now. The diffusion of women into a separate category leaves only men in the main category, and this is a mistake. I know that quite a bit more Category:Women by occupation subcategories have popped up in recent years, and I think the reaction on the internet shows why they're a problem. Let's turn this car around.--Mike Selinker (talk) 04:36, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
comment Not sure if I would agree with a wholesale merge of the women by occupation cats. I just think that if we *ever* create a woman-specific cat, we should create a male specific cat, and always diffuse. --Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 04:41, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment As I said before we have a long list, it is List of novelists from the United States. It includes both males and females, it includes people of all ethnicites, it includes at least in theory the many romantic fiction writers who were not put into a gender category, but were not found in the American novelists category because they were in Category:American romatic fictions writers which is a sbu-cat of the novelists category. Categories are not meant to be overly large, and the effect of recent edits has actually been to add people who were in genre-sepecfici subcats of Category:American novelists into the non-genre specific subcats. The whole nashing of teeth about this and calling people "sexist" is totally uncalled for. As BHG pointed out we have a long and thought out reason to divdie out women in writing seperately, and it is not a result of sexism by people in wikipedia.John Pack Lambert (talk) 04:03, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Support While I don't agree with all of JPL's arguments, I think his reasoning here is sound - people are massively misunderstanding the purpose of the Category:American novelists category - it is really a holding ground for people who have yet to be categorized into a more specific sub-cat. I do think not having a Category:American male novelists category is problematic and leads to the ghettoization problem, but if you have an author already in Category:American fantasy writers there is absolutely no reason to bubble them up to Category:American novelists also - it's not some sort of club that you have to be part of - if you are in a sub cat, you are by definition a member of the main cat - that's what sub-category membership implies.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 04:46, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
There is one for American male novelists, though not with that specific name, and John's been working to add articles to it. Someone has nominated that one for deletion too (see the log for April 25).--The Devil's Advocate tlk. cntrb. 04:55, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment The closer should consider that the use of terms like "sexism" in describing this issue by the New York Times and others may have scared away some editors from commenting on this. To some extent this seems to be a case of trying to bully people who hold different views. I also can't help feeling that the fact that this has been presented in very biased ways in the media, such as ignoring the 10 genre sub-cats, is argubably a form of unacceptable canvassing.John Pack Lambert (talk) 04:48, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
The problem with the sub-cats is that people aren't properly diffused into them. There are 4,000+ authors in the main "American novelists" category. You can't say with any amount of honesty that the majority of them don't belong in a genre sub-category. So it comes back to the point that several people made earlier - either merge or completely diffuse. I like the idea of diffusion, as a list of 4,000 people is useless from a navigational perspective. But maintaining a parent category that has any substantial number of articles is wrong if you're removing people to put them in a sub-category. Either everyone belongs in a sub-category (genre first, gender secondary), or everyone belongs in the parent category. Your arguments throughout this whole conversation have ignored that problem. --SlowWalkere (talk) 05:15, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Construct a category "American male novelists". The reason for having a separate category for each is that they may be looked for separately--in the creative arts, many things are valid distinctions. We're a NPOV encyclopedia, and any distinction people make should be recognized, whether or not we think making such a distinction socially desirable. It's only our continuing sexism that makes us think female anything a subordinate category, a survival of the early 20th century when it was an exception for those in any profession to be women, and even from the 19th, where those women in a profession were thought to be in some way inferior to the men -- a time when male novelists were assumed to write serious fiction, and women to write what by comparison was trivial. If we think this separation to be ghettoization, that indicates we subscribe in our own minds to those antiquated ideas, or, to word it more charitably, are at least are afraid that we might be thought to so subscribe. Myself, I am not just constructing a hypothetical argument, when I say the category women novelists is helpful because those are the ones I find I prefer to read. In a practical sense, in another field of the arts I am adding biographies of women because I think them under-represented here, and to do this I make use of such books as directories or encyclopedia of women in that field. Is it wrong to have such books? Is it wrong to add articles on that basis?
In actual practical terms, as pointed out on Jimmy's talk page, cross categorization by intersections is the way to resolves all the sub-categorization dilemmas; then those who wish to look for any arbitrary group of anything can find what they are looking for. In the meantime, all divisions by sex or nationality or religion should include everybody in reciprocal groups. (and to deal with those in more than one group, to list them as many times as necessary, and, if needed perhaps because of lack of information, to have a group of unclassified.) The basis of censorship is to not include or to deemphasize information that we think might be put to a bad use. DGG ( talk ) 05:13, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Sorry, you missed the point. You wrote: We have List of novelists from the United States that covers everyone in an alphabetic list." But this discussion is about categories, not about lists--your comment about lists is irrelevant. The point here is that the category in fact did not "cover everyone in an alphabetic list"-- it had been a category from which women writers had been removed. If you remove women novelists from the category "American novelists," it is very hard to escape the conclusion that, in Misplaced Pages's view, women are not novelists. Those who are objecting to this do not understand that if you leave some people (but not others out of a category), that implies that according to Misplaced Pages they are not in that category.Geoffrey.landis (talk) 13:12, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
No, Geoffrey, *you* missed the point. Several of the newspaper articles and blogs have called Category:American novelists a list, and have mixed up lists and categories, and have implied that wikipedia has a master list of novelists and women are being removed from it. As your comment above shows, even you - a seemingly experienced editor, massively misunderstand categories. From whence do you get this notion that "it is very hard to escape the conclusion that, in Misplaced Pages's view, women are not novelists."?? The wikipedia categorization system is meant to aid in navigation, it is not meant to be the end-all/be-all of who someone is. Let's take a different example - I'm going to use your same words: "If you remove mystery writers from the category "American novelists," (to diffuse to Category:American mystery writers it is very hard to escape the conclusion that, in Misplaced Pages's view, mystery writers are not novelists." Do you see how ridiculous that sounds? It's simple diffusion to a more specific sub-category. By moving them down, you are *not* removing them from their claim to membership in the parent. I could come up with 100 other examples but I won't bore you - just take a browse around the wikipedia category system, and read the guidance on categorization, which explicitly states that you should not put something in the parent and the child. There may be an exception proposed here for gender and ethnicity cats, but even that IMHO is problematic and way too prone to error.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 15:00, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep. Women in fields of arts are a typical, specific study object. No objection if people want to create and populate similar "male" and "other" (unknown, couples, ...) categories. Representing this as if the women are removed from the category is showing a misunderstanding of how our categorization system works; a subcat is an integral part of a parent cat: if you recategorize someone from "people from country X" to "people from city Y", you are not ghettoizing them, you are not removing them from the country category; you are making the category more specific to improve searchability and usability. Just look at the difference between Google Books for "American women novelists"148,000 results vs. "American male novelists"109 results or "American male novelists" 5979 results. Fram (talk) 08:21, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment the claim that Caegory:American novelsits is not realitically diffusable is higly questionable. I think we can diffuse it. I think we should do so on a variety of criteria, but with 11 by genre (well, if you count "children's novels" as a genre) sub-cats, I think we are well on our way to diffusing it.John Pack Lambert (talk) 08:26, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge. It's pointless to categorise people by gender unless their gender has a definite bearing on their role. In the case of writers it clearly does not. -- Necrothesp (talk) 09:25, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Clearly? These booksdisagree, as do many substudies (Black American women novelists, Native American wome novelists, ...). Fram (talk) 09:35, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
      • So, we're going to sub-categorise every single profession by race and gender are we? Or are we just singling out writers because their gender might (and only might) impinge on their writing? Because the vast majority of the novels I've read could quite easily have been written by someone of either gender. Utterly pointless and needless overcategorisation. We should categorise if things are relevant and only if they're relevant. -- Necrothesp (talk) 10:08, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
        • Yes, of course the vast majority of novels could have been written by anyone; that's why we don't categorize novels by the gender of the author. However, categorizing the authors by gender is a different story. Like it or not, but there are still aspects of being a female author that have notability relative to being a male author. The sources Fram provided make that clear. Powers 11:58, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and keep and make category for male novelists, and unclassifiable, too. My reason is that I can see a female novelist category being useful if I were a student of women in literature, or gender studies, and likewise a male category would be potentially useful. I don't support blaming visitors for not immediately noticing the subcategories and reject the argument that being moved to a subcategory is no change in status from being in the supercategory. My preferred solution is to list all novelists as "novelist" and " novelist", because there is a clear use case for a complete list of American novelists without regard to gender (i.e. an American literature student). Suitov (talk) 09:38, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Keep - The topic of female novelists is very important and heavily documented. WP readers doing research often will need access to this particular subset of writers. Keeping this gender-based category will lead to the creation of a "Male novelest" category, which is not ideal, but that is the lesser of two evils. Merging both genders into a huge category deprives readers of important information. --Noleander (talk) 10:27, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Both gender categories would still be huge. All can be kept in "American novelists" even if women also had a separate category for women. As someone who writes and researches novelist articles, the gender split would be nonsensical and disruptive to me.--Milowent 13:07, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

I propose a change to the way categories are handled, which would avoid this and other similar issues. It would, however, require a change to the way WP handles categories.

Instead of having to separately categorize an author into “American”, “Novelist”, “Women”, “Fantasy writers”, etc., create a sub-category for each permutation of type of writer, genre, nationality, gender, etc.

These categories should then automatically roll up to the parent categories, i.e. American Novelist, etc. This way the master lists don't need to be separately maintained. This would solve multiple problems with the current system. The parent categories would be very large, but that is a the way they should be. Adding a search by name, last initial, or something similar, would help navigate the category. EricKent (talk) 13:12, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

  • "A gender-specific category could be implemented where gender has a specific relation to the topic."
  • "Dedicated group-subject subcategories, such as Category:LGBT writers or Category:African-American musicians, should be created only where that combination is itself recognized as a distinct and unique cultural topic in its own right. If a substantial and encyclopedic head article (not just a list) cannot be written for such a category, then the category should not be created. Please note that this does not mean that the head article must already exist before a category can be created, but that it must at least be possible to create one."
  • "For example, LGBT writers are a well-studied biographical category with secondary sources discussing the personal experiences of LGBT writers as a class, unique publishing houses, awards, censorship, a distinctive literary contribution (LGBT literature), and other professional concerns, and therefore Category:LGBT writers is valid. However, gay people in linguistics do not represent a particularly distinct or unique class within their field, so Category:Gay linguists should not be created."
  • "As another example, a female heads of government category is valid as a topic of special encyclopedic interest, though it does not need to be balanced directly against a "Male heads of government" category, as historically the vast majority of political leaders have been male by default. Both male and female heads of government should continue to be filed in the appropriate gender-neutral role category."
FYI—--Carwil (talk) 13:13, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Request for Clarification (second time) I continue to think that there is an ambiguity in this discussion that has to do with display. If I am understanding the category hierarchy correctly, a women in American Women Novelists is in American Novelists. Yet for any given writer, only one of these will appear on his or her page, and clicking on Category:American novelists lists only those novelists not in a subcategory. This is not necessarily how most people understand categories and subcategories (in general, not just on Misplaced Pages) to work. At the very least, the page displayed when someone clicks on Category:American novelists should have an option to display "all members of subcategories." Right now it creates the wrong impression that subcategory members are not part of the higher-level category. That is factually wrong, but difficult for users to see, and is the cause of the current confusion. How about a fix in the way category pages are displayed, either including subcategory members, or providing a clear toggle to allow this? Right now, the top-level category page looks as if members of the subcategory are not members of the top category, which is not true.Wichitalineman (talk) 13:28, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
I cannot see why you are saying "Right now it creates the wrong impression that subcategory members are not part of the higher-level category?" when it does not create such impression (not to mention that any impressions are way too subjective to ever consider them - different people will have different impressions, just like tastes). Subcategories are clearly listed at the top of each category page. Any subcategory is a part of its parent category by definition. This is what sub- prefix means! If people fail to understand such basic things, they should get some education. They could read subcategory article at the very least. And by the way, making any change to MediaWiki software is waaaaay harder than anyone here can imagine. Netrat (talk) 15:41, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
This has performance implications - because you're not just talking about subcats, if you're serious about capturing everyone, you'd have to recursively pull in all of the subcats of the subcats of the subcats. In any case, this CfD is not the appropriate venue for a technology challenge such as that - maybe to go village pump.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 15:09, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

Saying that the category should not be merged because there are other sub-categories of writers that are not, is disingenuous. The problem came to attention with this specific category, but the solution should apply to all sub-categories. Not merging women is sexist. Not merging black writers is racist. Saying that this is the way that it has been done, is the equivalent of those who said that women shouldn't vote, or that slavery shouldn't be abolished. When something this egregiously wrong occurs, it will attract the attention of the general public. Saying that they don't understand the way WP works, and therefor should be ignored, is irresponsible. This will seriously damage the credibility of WP. EricKent (talk) 13:29, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

  • Nothing disingenious about it, just a difference of opinion. You support the notion that pages should be in subcategories and in parent categories, not just in subcategories. Others disagree. A random example: Susanna Carr is a member of Category:American romantic fiction writers, but not directly of Category:American novelists (nor of Category:American women novelists). Does this mean that she isn't considered to be an American novelist? Not at all. Can people understand it in this way though? Apparently they can. Most people only choose to read it like this only for the "women novelists" cat though, and not for other cats. This selective outrage seems to be either fake or a case of incorrectly applied political correctness. No one seems to be saying though that people who genuinely misunderstand this or disagree with the method of categorisation in general should be ignored: people are looking for a solution (e.g. the many "merge and keep" votes), but there probably won't be a solution that pleases everybody, and rushing to a solution because of some rather inflammatory newspaper reports is rarely the best way to proceed. Note that e.g. Category:British women writers exists since 2007 without apparently any problem (it doesn't even have a talk page). Fram (talk) 13:47, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment: I agree with the editor who suggested "Keeping this category and Depopulating Category:American novelists, putting all articles in relevant sub-categories". Invertzoo (talk) 14:14, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment As I said before we have a long list, it is List of novelists from the United States. It includes both males and females, it includes people of all ethnicites, it includes at least in theory the many romantic fiction writers who were not put into a gender category, but were not found in the American novelists category because they were in Category:American romatic fictions writers which is a sbu-cat of the novelists category. Categories are not meant to be overly large, and the effect of recent edits has actually been to add people who were in genre-sepecfici subcats of Category:American novelists into the non-genre specific subcats. The whole nashing of teeth about this and calling people "sexist" is totally uncalled for. As BHG pointed out we have a long and thought out reason to divdie out women in writing seperately, and it is not a result of sexism by people in wikipedia.John Pack Lambert (talk) 04:03, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Comment I am asking again of John Pack Lambert, specifically because you are the editor who is most responsible for this action and you refer repeatedly to the proper understanding of category application: why can't the category pages include a toggle to display or not display members of subcategories? This is a very standard way for categories to operate and the lack of such a toggle is in large part responsible for the misunderstanding that is driving this controversy. It is going to come up again and again if the "lowest-level category only" rule keeps being applied. Wichitalineman (talk) 14:38, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
I'm not sure why you're asking him - go ask over at the Village Pump or ask the media wiki developers. They're not going to add this because for higher level categories there would literally be millions of pages - it's not just direct sub-cats, it's their subcats too. If you want all members of a cat and subcats, there are external tools which allow this but they are slow - for a reason.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 15:09, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
I was asking him because his responses seem to depend on the availability of such a function--otherwise his continual references to the subcategories "being part of" the larger categories is not that useful, since users can't see that. If there was not some other goal in operation here I would think he would agree with my point about display, because display is the issue that people have been pointing to, whereas John Pack Lambert keeps pointing to the underlying "reality" of the categories. As a side note, if there are truly categories with millions of pages, that would seem to suggest that the top-level American Novelists (and even above that, American Authors, and above that Americans?) is never going to be too big, as it will never grow beyond hundreds of pages. However, I agree now with the solution below from Carwil that this problem is solved by making American Women Writers a "non-diffusing" "distinguished" subcategory. Wichitalineman (talk) 15:25, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Ok, try this. Click on a category. See the bottom part of the page? That shows all the pages that are directly in the category. See the middle part of the page? The part labeled "Subcategories"? Those are all of the categories that are members of this category. That's what JPL means when he says the subcats are PART OF the larger cats - as they are, and are displayed that way on the screen, and can easily be navigated to from the category screen. Also I didn't say there are cats with millions of pages (though those also exist), my point was once you start adding subcategories recursively, many higher-level cats could end up with millions of pages from their children, and thus become basically useless.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 15:36, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
I understand and had understood the subcategory point you are making and knew they are displayed on the higher-level pages; my point all along has been that it is not transparent to users that the subcategories available there mean that members of those are members of the top-level class (via set-theoretical commutation). On the second point, I see what you are saying about the "millions" issue. I'm still interested in the raw numbers: how big is too big for any given level of categorization? Who decides? Wichitalineman (talk) 15:55, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Merge and Keep—The category is notable, it should just be marked by Template:Distinguished subcategory. Also, reply to John Pack Lambert's last comment: A system where men appear in the default category while women are appear in the women's category looks sexist. I don't care if you are sexist, just whether Misplaced Pages's interface is. Fundamentally, your arguments ("Categories are not meant to be overly large") are about our filing system, and not about how users access human knowledge, so please get over it. Misplaced Pages is mostly visited by readers, not editors. It's our job to make their lives and visits easier, not to make ourselves happier about the simplicity of our filing system.--Carwil (talk) 14:36, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
    • Comment Thank you for this, which I agree with. Can you clarify about how "distinguished subcategory" works? I have checked Misplaced Pages:Categorization and it isn't explicated at length. Is the point that "American Women Novelists" should be a "non-diffusing category" (Misplaced Pages:Categorization#Subcategorization)? Wichitalineman (talk) 15:25, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
      • Non-Diffuse, or better yet, make a separate category, please Wow, this forum has become nearly unnavigable due to such interest! I've gleaned that there is a popular point, which I will try to put in my own words: •It's sexist to subcategorize women authors but not men (Therefore, either 1- subcat neither, Or 2- subcat both). I disagree—not that it's sexist, but that either of those two solutions is good. We NEED to acknowledge that women novelists are important as a category unto themselves, much like Category:Female heads of government — I mean, editors aren't making a category called "Male heads of government", nor should we. However, don't hide the American Women Novelists, especially if there isn't a further subcat inside it. Previous commenter makes an important point: Misplaced Pages:Categorization#Subcategorization suggests this can be a non-diffuse category. HOWEVER, there's an even better way, as per Misplaced Pages:Categorization/Ethnicity, gender, religion and sexuality which states:

QUOTE ... Also in regards to the "ghettoization" issue, an ethnicity/gender/religion/sexuality subcategory should never be implemented as the final rung in a category tree. If a category is not otherwise dividable into more specific groupings, then do not create an E/G/R/S subcategory. For instance: if Category:American poets is not realistically dividable on other grounds, then do not create a subcategory for "African-American poets", as this will only serve to isolate these poets from the main category. Instead, simply apply "African-American writers" (presuming Category:Writers is the parent of Category:Poets) and "American poets" as two distinct categories. ENDQUOTE

Let's fix this, but let's fix it in a smart way that doesn't downplay women novelists as a distinct group worthy of recognition, yet also doesn't force a "male novelists" category in useless pursuit of gender parity. And let's do it also in a way that lets Harper Lee, Ralph Ellison, and Robert Heinlein be in the same category of American Novelists. (As a purely personal opinion, I'd mention that we don't have to include Gloria Tesch, John Ringo, or Joy Deja King; they can go in subcats). Mang (talk) 15:41, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

      • Exactly, the "non-diffusing category" American novelists would be marked by {{All included}} (perhaps with non-difusion only applying to ethnicity/gender subcategories) and its ethnic and gender subcategories would be marked by {{Distinguished subcategory}}. Both are mentioned on the Subcategorization page. (The fact that the templates have more common-sense names, while the policy pages have more technical names is part of the user-friendliness vs. technical aspect of our wikipedia culture.)--Carwil (talk) 15:15, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
  • comment This whole discussion is frankly ridiculous and full of exaggerated rage and bogus accusations of sexism. Why aren't the NY Times and Huffington Post and all of the SPA commenters in this discussion going after THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS - which, not surprisingly, has the same cats as we do here: novelists, and women novelists. Here is a by Anne Rice - who is a pretty famous novelist if you ask me - and she is categorized as a woman novelist and not as a novelist. Are you guys all ready to start writing letters to the library of congress to deal with this? And are any of those who are outraged by this willing to do the actual hard work to clean up not just the American category, but all 50 other countries where this is an issue? --Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 15:30, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
The U.S. Government also supported slavery; its not the same thing. I'll volunteer to clean up any categories for every country, once we have the resolution straight, I am sure I can recruit others. But it better not including putting Dawn Langley Simmons in Category:British intersex novelists.--Milowent 15:53, 26 April 2013 (UTC)
Wow. I think you just won the Godwin award. Well done. I'm not quite sure how your deft logic works, but I remain stunned that you were able to link the library of congress categorization scheme to slavery, and using only 11 words. Awesome!
As to Intersex novelists, that's an interesting one. Why not? If there is a field of study around media/art/books/etc by intersex people, why wouldn't we create such categories? I guess we sort of do, since we have Category:LGBT writers from the United Kingdom - not sure if Dawn fits into the 'T' there.--Obi-Wan Kenobi (talk) 16:01, 26 April 2013 (UTC)

Category:African Development

Nominator's rationale: Rename to match parent category Category:International development and to remove ambiguity/capitalization. jonkerz ♠talk 18:52, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

Category:Gangnam Style

Nominator's rationale: Delete. Is there a need to have an eponymous category of a song? Maybe this is a case where a navbox is more in order along the lines of {{Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band}}. There are a number of articles related to it due to its cultural impact but Category:Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was deleted in a CfD. If kept, the parent category needs to be changed to appropriately described its contents (they're not all songs by Psy). --Starcheerspeaksnewslostwars 17:08, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

Category:Lists of characters in Magic: The Gathering

Nominator's rationale: Only one entry in the category, and of that entry, the template I've submitted for TFD. Izno (talk) 15:27, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

Category:Equestrian commanders of vexillationes

Nominator's rationale: This should be an article (containing a list of examples), not a category. DexDor (talk) 06:14, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

American local politicians

This is a significant overlap. The two should be merged and renamed to "Local politicians in the United States" because A) there is an existing Wikimedia category: Local_politicians_of_the_United_States, and B) "politicians" is more general than "office holder." It is always possible that there are notable people who were never elected or appointed to anything (i.e. they are notable for something else.) and C) the name is consistent with others. Greg Bard (talk) 05:19, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

  • Comment. I have reformatted this to list correctly and to format the request in the normal way. Vegaswikian (talk) 05:58, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment: Until yesterday, when the "American local politicians" category was created, the only one of these redundant categories that existed was the one for "Local political office-holders," which title is consistent with the parent hierarchy in Category:Local political office-holders by country. I definitely agree with merging these two redundant categories, but after reflection I think that Category:Local political office-holders in the United States is the category that should survive. My reasoning is that (1) I believe the main reason why the encyclopedia is interested in these people is their holding of government office, not their engagement in politics, and (2) this is consistent with the structure employed for the rest of the world. Rather than renaming the U.S.-level category to match the state categories for "local politicians", I suggest that the state-level categories should be renamed to match the parent. Local politicians who never held public office cam be adequately categorized elsewhere (e.g., in by-party categories such as Fooian Republicans, in by-place categories such as People from Anytown, and in subcategories of Category:American political bosses by state). The rare case of a local politician who never held public office should not dictate the naming of this entire category hierarchy. Also, Commons category naming does not control category naming at English Misplaced Pages. --Orlady (talk) 00:04, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment if someone were making a distinction between politicians who actually held office from those who never did, at least local politicians, the children of the first cat are overbroad and so variously hacked up. Is this distinction meaningful? Presumably few people are notable because they ran for but lost some local political contest and many of the non-local-office holders are notable because of holding either higher office or something unrelated to politics (sport, science, entertainment, crime, etc.). Carlossuarez46 (talk) 00:35, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • In fact, almost all of the people in these categories did hold local elective office. The argument that a "politicians" category is needed for non-office-holders is largely hypothetical. Additionally, almost all of the people in these categories are notable for their activity in government and politics (for example, a county commissioner who later became a congressman); I've only seen a few who are notable for some unrelated reason. --Orlady (talk) 05:04, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Question. In reviewing the contents, is there a better name? Local is rather subjective. If we climb the tree we get to local government which would appear to limit this to mayors and municipal councils but not school boards or county officials. Vegaswikian (talk) 02:21, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Most sources define "local government" as encompassing counties, cities, towns, villages, school districts, library districts, etc. There is a user here who has been pushing the unorthodox view that counties are "arms of state government", based on extrapolations from sources such as a single sentence in 2003 report by the county executive of Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, griping about state mandates on counties. I hope we can deal with these categories without getting into a full-blown examination of that user's theories, but that may not be possible. --Orlady (talk) 05:04, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment: I've never been particularly crazy about the "political office-holders" wording myself, but I've never been quite sure of the best way to articulate my concern — but as long as that's still a standard international tree, there's not much useful reason for the US to be the only country that's left out of it. I'd be more than willing to support a comprehensive reconsideration of Category:Political office-holders in its entirety, but not the notion that it's problematic only for local politicians in the United States. Bearcat (talk) 03:14, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
  • Comment: Think of it this way: We have categories for offices already, and we generally place the people in those categories. We don't need a category for both offices and officials. Greg Bard (talk) 04:33, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
I had to sleep on this one in hopes I'd understand your point. I'm still not sure what you are trying to say, but I'll try to respond anyway. The "office-holders" category is for people, not offices. Categories for some types of local offices, such as Category:District boards of education in the United States do include a separate, but related, people category (in that case, Category:School board members in the United States). Consistent with the way way categories are organized in Misplaced Pages That category also has a broader "people" category for another parent. Until 24 April, when you added that category to the newly created Category:American local politicians, the broad people category it was in was Category:Local political office-holders in the United States. Now it is in two redundant people categories. It appears to me that the question being addressed here is which of the two "people category" names should survive. --Orlady (talk) 13:44, 25 April 2013 (UTC)