Der Standard

Women, Own Your ‘Dr.’ Titles

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It had never occurred to me to add “Ph.D.” to my name on Twitter until I was slammed for mentioning that I had one.

In February, I was tweeting about the media’s different treatment of the private lives of male and female politician­s when someone snarled back: “And you have evidence of this or are you just being a bitter old sexist?”

“Yes, I have written a Ph.D. on the subject,” I replied. “So it’s Doctor Bitter Old Sexist, mate.”

The response blew me backward. Not from those who got the joke, but from those who took offense at the fact that I said I had an advanced degree in history. One that took several years of solid slogging for little financial reward. Years marked by as much isolation and self- doubt as discovery and original research.

In the last few months of writing my dissertati­on — which I did while working full time as a journalist — my hair began to shed in sheets. Three times, I consulted a doctor who told me the only thing that would prevent my going bald was finishing it.

For many years, I was not sure whether it was worth it. But nonetheles­s, I remain proud of my Ph.D. because I persisted and completed it.

So I was fascinated to discover that some viewed the degree not as a sign of expertise but as a provocatio­n, a pretension.

I was told on social media that I was an elitist snob, that Ph.D.s were worthless and did not prove anything. I changed my name on Twitter to “Dr. Julia Baird.”

And lo, every few days, someone — almost exclusivel­y male — would tweet to say I was arrogant and stupid and that it would be in my best interest to take it down.

One guy called Jim Ball posted: “Perusing @bairdjulia Twitter feed, yes we get that you have a Ph.D. Julia. Well done. But you reveal an underlying insecurity appending it to your Twitter handle.”

A host of academics then piled on, with a horde of women revealing that they, too, had been taunted for using their titles, while many men who had not were baffled.

Dr. Alan Nixon, a researcher in the sociology of religion at Western Sydney University, said, “I’ve had Dr. in my profile name since 2015 and have never been questioned on it.” Dr. Stephen Maclean, an anatomy lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, wrote, “I had no idea doctorate-shaming was even a thing!”

And this month, a British historian, Dr. Fern Riddell, had a similar experience.

On June 13, reacting to a decision by The Globe and Mail to restrict use of the Dr. title to medical practition­ers, Dr. Riddell wrote on Twitter: “My title is Dr. Fern Rid- dell, not Ms. or Miss Riddell. I have it because I am an expert, and my life and career consist of being that expert in as many different ways as possible. I worked hard to earn my authority, and I will not give it up to anyone.”

A “David Green” immediatel­y responded that her comments could “legitimate­ly be regarded as immodest.” A man called “Warren Whitmore” said Dr. Riddell had “shown extreme disrespect toward white men (who are generally far more useful to society than female academics)” and that she would have to refuse help from a “white male fireman” if her house were burning down. This response, she responded, left her “crying with joy.”

The fracas has incited large swaths of academic women to add “Dr.” to their name on Twitter, and the hashtag #immodestwo­man has spread globally.

It’s not just about women: The disturbing tendency to dismiss academic and especially scientific expertise as bias, or elitism, is at high tide, and climbing.

But it seems particular­ly acute for female academics. Women regularly report being called professor, and even reverend, less than male counterpar­ts, and research has shown that female physicians

We are told to apologize, to shrink, to shut up. So don’t.

are called doctor less often than men are.

It is these markers that indicate respect and an acceptance of authority. And it is these markers that can also be tiny plinths we can occasional­ly mount to add our voices to the cacophony of words in public debate.

Given how often women are disgusting­ly abused online, I used to think the best response was to periodical­ly retreat and be quiet. But now I think we need to own those spaces, to blaze and burn, and to swarm and support each other in masses, in vigilante-hordes. Twitter is an oft-maligned and imperfect platform. But it is an important part of the public square.

For centuries, the voices of women have been muted and minimized. Our right to speak has been questioned, our authority mocked. The cultural underpinni­ngs of this run deep in church and state and still erupt grotesquel­y online. We are regularly told to apologize, to shrink, to shut up.

So don’t. You don’t need a title to speak. But if you do have one, use it. Find your voice, and raise it. Stake your authority, and state it. Don’t recoil. Don’t back down.

Sometimes authority should be worn lightly. But sometimes it should be brandished like a torch.

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