>I don't think it is helpful to assign gender based systemic bias every
time an edit is questioned on women related topic.
To put it in perspective, this was the article as it existed just before
the {{notability}} tag was applied—three days after it was created, and two days
after the {{unreviewed}} tag was removed:
There is a summary of the novel, a list of characters, a statement of who
the author is and where she teaches, and two references—one to what seems to be
a review in The New Statesman (OK as far as RS goes), the other to what
seems to be a website which may or may not be considered a reliable source.
There’s nothing about the award, which would probably have kept the
{{notability}} tag at bay.
>Plenty of people have similar frustration about notability tags being
placed on their newly created articles especially on >niche topics.
Of course, that happens a lot less when you get to be patrol-exempt.
But even still, on the occasions (and there still are some) when I create
an article and for whatever reason can’t put refs in it right away, I’m looking
over my virtual shoulder until I can (Once I had to wait an hour, and was
absolutely paranoid that someone would tag it or—God forbid—nominate it for
speedy deletion in the meantime). Yes, even me.
I don’t how routinely we advise newer editors to do this, but the fact is
that when you create a new article, especially on a niche topic, you shouldn’t
go live in mainspace with it until you’ve got sourced assertion of notability in
it, and probably at least a few other sources as well. That’s what the newpage
patrollers are looking for.
Daniel Case