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Powerful women tend to be called by their first name. It's not an accident

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July 25, 2024

Powerful women tend to be called by their first name. It's not an accident

Source: NPR

NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to University of Houston's Mirya Holman about why women in political leadership tend to be referred to by their first names more often than their male counterparts.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST: A moment from four years ago might feel familiar to any woman in a position of authority.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

SUSAN PAGE: Kamala Harris - Senator Harris, I mean - I'm sorry.

KAMALA HARRIS: That's fine. I'm Kamala.

PAGE: No, no, no...

HARRIS: (Laughter).

PAGE: ...You're Senator Harris to me.

SHAPIRO: That was the vice presidential debate in 2020, where moderator Susan Page slipped and called Senator Harris by her first name. Research shows that this happens to women in positions of power all the time, whether they are authors, professors or even vice president of the United States. So if you've noticed people referring to Trump, Biden and Kamala, it's not your imagination.

Mirya Holman studies gender in American politics at the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston, and I asked her whether this first-name gender gap is simply evidence of a bias against women.

MIRYA HOLMAN: One of the pieces that I think is going on here is that women are not seen as the norm in politics. They're unusual. And so people think about who they are in a different way. I do actually think it is a sign of disrespect in an environment where you have multiple candidates, and you're referring to one by her first name and then all of the men by their last name. You are making her the exception and not giving her that very small piece of respect that we give people in positions of power.

Read here the full interview published by NPR on 24 July 2024.

Image by NPR

 

Resource type
Author
Erika Ryan, Courtney Dorning, Ari Shapiro
Focus areas

NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to University of Houston's Mirya Holman about why women in political leadership tend to be referred to by their first names more often than their male counterparts.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST: A moment from four years ago might feel familiar to any woman in a position of authority.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

SUSAN PAGE: Kamala Harris - Senator Harris, I mean - I'm sorry.

KAMALA HARRIS: That's fine. I'm Kamala.

PAGE: No, no, no...

HARRIS: (Laughter).

PAGE: ...You're Senator Harris to me.

SHAPIRO: That was the vice presidential debate in 2020, where moderator Susan Page slipped and called Senator Harris by her first name. Research shows that this happens to women in positions of power all the time, whether they are authors, professors or even vice president of the United States. So if you've noticed people referring to Trump, Biden and Kamala, it's not your imagination.

Mirya Holman studies gender in American politics at the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston, and I asked her whether this first-name gender gap is simply evidence of a bias against women.

MIRYA HOLMAN: One of the pieces that I think is going on here is that women are not seen as the norm in politics. They're unusual. And so people think about who they are in a different way. I do actually think it is a sign of disrespect in an environment where you have multiple candidates, and you're referring to one by her first name and then all of the men by their last name. You are making her the exception and not giving her that very small piece of respect that we give people in positions of power.

Read here the full interview published by NPR on 24 July 2024.

Image by NPR

 

Resource type
Author
Erika Ryan, Courtney Dorning, Ari Shapiro
Focus areas