My pal S. E. Zbasnik asked for some space on my blog to discuss an important issue: how women are presented in fiction. The issue is most problematic in fantasy, science fiction and
adventure fiction, but can be seen across genres and types of media. As someone who made it a priority to write independent, kick-ass female superheroes to go along with my independent, kick-ass male superheroes, I'm happy to present her guest post, below.
Like nonplussed and literally, the phrase “strong female character” has come to mean its antithesis. When people hear it they picture a full fleshed out woman with her own wants and desires. What they get is a woman in a mini skirt and thigh high boots that occasionally punches people.
But, and this is vital, that strong female character, cannot actually save the day. Her entire existence is for the main male hero. She may be spunky and sassy and is always met beating up some guys, but the second she teams up with MMH (main male hero) she abandons everything in her life to help him on his quest. Perhaps she manages to get captured and somehow fully forget how to fight allowing the MMH to do all the cool stuff while she sits around in a metal bikini.
S. E. Zbasnik has a new book out called The King’sBlood. It’s got some magic, it’s got some witches, it’s got a black heroine in
a medieval setting, and it has more puns per cubic meter than a clown car.
Check
out the goodreads page for more information.
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Help keep the words flowing.
I Hate Strong Female Characters
Like nonplussed and literally, the phrase “strong female character” has come to mean its antithesis. When people hear it they picture a full fleshed out woman with her own wants and desires. What they get is a woman in a mini skirt and thigh high boots that occasionally punches people.
But, and this is vital, that strong female character, cannot actually save the day. Her entire existence is for the main male hero. She may be spunky and sassy and is always met beating up some guys, but the second she teams up with MMH (main male hero) she abandons everything in her life to help him on his quest. Perhaps she manages to get captured and somehow fully forget how to fight allowing the MMH to do all the cool stuff while she sits around in a metal bikini.
Strong female character is a buzzword. People know it’s
something audiences want, so they throw it in for anything. Have a female
character? Well, she’s a strong female character!
But, she’s only got three lines and you didn’t even name
her beyond “Busty Hottie?”
Yeah, but look, she totally stabbed that one bad guy in
the eye. Strong female character!
I stated once that “if your female character doesn't exist
outside of the prism of your male character's existence, you do not have a
‘strong woman.’”
Quite a few male writers had to rush to my somnolent twitter
feed to inform me I was wrong (of course I am, I'm just a girl), that all of
their characters are strong females because they hit things. Sometimes they hit
things really hard. Maybe one's like a B cup, a large B cup of course. And then
they drop the bomb, “well it passed the Bechdel Test so they're all capable
characters, can't accuse me of sexism.”
Let us break down the Bechdel test for those who have yet to
hear of it.
In order to pass all you need are
- Two named women
- Together in a scene (only one scene necessary)
- Talking about something other than men
That is bloody it. The point of it was to show how rarely
movies passed, that so much of media falls upon the 25:75 ratio. One Sue Storm
to the three other fantastics (soulless scientists not withstanding). It was to
give data for how rare it is for women to exist outside or to have a point
beyond the main male character’s purpose.
The test was supposed to draw attention to the dearth of
female characters, instead so many men found it a convenient excuse to prove
they can't be accused of sexism.
Throw in a character named Candy talking to another named
Mandy about how awesome shoes are, then back to the guys actually saving the
world. Boom, Bechdel Test passed. This is a totally feminist work with three
dimensional women.
I'm not a big fan of playing the reverse game, but imagine
the utter shit fits thrown if all you needed to prove you created a fully
fleshed out three dimensional male character is that you have
- Two named men
- Together in one scene
- Talking about something that has nothing to do with women
This Brochdel Test is passed by, oh, just about every movie
in existence. Men can have pasts, they can have motivations, desires, needs,
wants outside of sex.
Women have that one scene where the love interest gossips
with her best friend, who will probably never be seen again.
I despise the always tacked on female character in action
movies because she's there for one reason, to polish the main character's
penis. Once that's done, she's nothing more than an animated set piece,
occasionally transformed into a breathing MacGuffin. Oh sure, maybe she throws
a punch or two, taps a stick lightly against a rat of unusual size; but if you
removed the male character, she would cease to exist. All her motivation comes
down to is making the male protagonist happy (ifyaknowwhatImean nudge nudge);
without him around she'd stand blank like a Stepford robot in the kitchen,
making sad beeping noises, waiting for someone to switch her off.
No, passing the Bechdel test does not mean you have a fully
culpable, capable, or even somewhat realistic female character. If you're
uncertain and concerned you could try asking another woman and, this is the
really important part, listening to her. Don't ignore the words flowing out of
her mouth and mentally fill in her criticism with
diamonds/babies/yogurt/ chocolate/pumpkin spice latte and change nothing. We've
been doing this woman thing a hell of a lot longer than you. We may just know
what we're talking about.
So I say we need to have a second level of the Bechdel test;
if you are basing the idea that you cannot be accused of sexism upon this test,
then you need to pass the second level.
- Have a named female character
- Whose life does not revolve around a male character
- Done. Maybe have some pancakes to celebrate?
I'm guessing, much like the original Bechdel test, most
media will fail.
There’s another approach to creating the false “strong
female character” that’s grown in popularity as male writers try to shoehorn in
a female character but keep all the interesting stuff with men.
We’ll give them a woman who’s trained her entire life to
become a ninja chimney sweep. She’s forsaken friends, love, and a normal life
to master the secrets of ninja chimney sweeping. She’s harsh, but witty, with a
short fuse for those who waste her time. But this story won’t have a damn thing
to do with her. No, it has to be about a white guy, mid 20’s with a bit of a
pot belly who is almost a total screw up.
But this guy is destined to be the great ninja chimney sweep
hero. You can’t argue with it. It’s destiny. Rather than the girl using her
lifetime of awesomeness to defeat the dust monster clogging up the lungs of
Earth, instead she must lose two-three weeks of her life trying to train a
perpetual fuck up. Because that makes tactical sense, to send an untrained and
untested rookie instead of the person who devoted her life to it.
It’s the “girls can’t save the world” trope. She may be
confident, she may be talented, she may be terrifying beyond anything the
villain can imagine, but she cannot save the galaxy. Only boys can do that. So
they take that female character they built up and delegate her back to being
the prize waiting at home for the real hero to return once he’s finished
falling into winning. Sure, she gets a backstory and maybe even a bit of
autonomy, but it means jack squat when all she gets to do with that
characterization is stand around waiting for a male character to save the day.
Yet, the creators can run around screaming “Look, we made a
strong female character.” She can punch really hard. She doesn’t dream about
boys. She won’t need any rescuing. She won’t do any saving either, but that’s
not important. All that matters is we made one. We didn’t use one, but we made
her.
That is not enough. Boys have grown up watching men save the
galaxy for eons, but you can’t let a woman do it? Even if its part of an
ensemble, she’s relegated to the half naked hottie that goes along with whatever
the leader wants. It’s a guy who’s the comic relief, a guy who’s the muscle, a
guy who saves the galaxy. The girl waits around for a kiss and punches a few
baddies, but not too many. We don’t want to emasculate the hero.
Because this is the overriding fear with every strong female
character. If we let her be too impressive, let her do too much on her own,
then she won’t need a male to save her.
What if, instead of needing a man, she wanted one around? She wanted one
for his friendship, or for his humor, or because he treated her like a person
instead of a pile of sexy body parts? Impossible! Give her a stick to swing
around, put her in a bikini, and call it a role model for little girls. Done!
This isn’t even touching upon the idea that not all strong
women beat people up. Tactics, cunning, or even emotional manipulation can a
powerful woman make; but in order for that to happen, a woman would have to be
smarter than a man and we’re right back to emasculation terror. Sure, maybe she
knows some secret ninja woman moves that allow her to take out a few bad guys.
That’s acceptable. But outsmarting some big baddie? Unthinkable!
Girls must always be shown as lesser than boys, even when
people are swearing up and down that they’re not by hiding behind “it’s a
strong female character.” To admit for a moment that women can be just as
capable as men is too terrifying for the average writing crop to admit.
And that’s why I hate strong female characters, who are
anything but.
/////
||| Comments are welcome |||
Help keep the words flowing.
Very thoughtful post!
ReplyDeleteI think the Bechdel test is misleading as well. And by its standards, my current WIP probably doesn't pass, but I still think some of the female characters are really strong and others are weak people, because they are all human. No one is perfect. :)
The focus on the Bechdel had been bothering me, but I couldn't put my finger on why.
ReplyDeleteWhat you wrote explains it exactly.
Thanks also for pulling Sucker Punch into this with the picture. I got so sick of hearing about "empowerment" when that came out, all the "it's okay to be sexy" tripe that completely missed the point.