Strong female character: Difference between revisions
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Characterizing people on attributes other than gender stereotypes is a critical aspect of characterization and good writing. While failing to characterize gender stereotypes is sexist, moving beyond gender stereotypes is but the first step in non-sexist writing: other pitfalls include, for example, gendered plotting, or unnoted acceptance of sexism on both the part of characters and the authorial voice. | Characterizing people on attributes other than gender stereotypes is a critical aspect of characterization and good writing. While failing to characterize gender stereotypes is sexist, moving beyond gender stereotypes is but the first step in non-sexist writing: other pitfalls include, for example, gendered plotting, or unnoted acceptance of sexism on both the part of characters and the authorial voice. | ||
Avoiding all pitfalls of sexist writing may render a work non-sexist, but it does not necessarily render a work ''feminist'' or ''anti-sexist''. | Avoiding all pitfalls of sexist writing may render a work [[non-sexist]], but it does not necessarily render a work ''[[feminist]]'' or ''[[anti-sexist]]''. | ||
[[Category:Feminism]] | [[category:Feminism]] | ||
[[Category:Feminism and critical theory]] | |||
[[Category:Characterization]] | [[Category:Characterization]] | ||
Latest revision as of 11:08, 11 November 2010
Some people consider that "strong female characters" are sufficient to define a work — particularly SF or other genre work — as feminist. This is no doubt in response to a standard that focused work on male characters, with female characters poorly characterized or entirely absent.
Characterizing people on attributes other than gender stereotypes is a critical aspect of characterization and good writing. While failing to characterize gender stereotypes is sexist, moving beyond gender stereotypes is but the first step in non-sexist writing: other pitfalls include, for example, gendered plotting, or unnoted acceptance of sexism on both the part of characters and the authorial voice.
Avoiding all pitfalls of sexist writing may render a work non-sexist, but it does not necessarily render a work feminist or anti-sexist.