Women in refrigerators: Difference between revisions
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=== Comic Books === | === Comic Books === | ||
== Women in Refrigerators | == Women in Refrigerators Syndrome == | ||
Stories in which women aren't necessarily put in actual refrigerators, but where their deaths, suffering, or otherwise unpleasant fates are used as plot devices in a male character's storyline. | Stories in which women aren't necessarily put in actual refrigerators, but where their deaths, suffering, or otherwise unpleasant fates are used as plot devices in a male character's storyline. | ||
=== Books === | === Books === | ||
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=== Movies === | === Movies === | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
Revision as of 14:49, 21 February 2007
Sexist trope prevalent within comics, but also present in other media, which was identified by Gail Simone, who coined the expression and compiled a list of "superheroines who have been either depowered, raped, or cut up and stuck in the refrigerator".
The Women in Refrigerators Syndrome describes the recurrent use of the murder (or other mistreatment) of female characters as a plot device to advance a male character's story.
- This article is a SEED, meaning it is tiny and needs lots of work. Help it grow.
Women in Refrigerators
Actual examples of women in refrigerators (alive, dead, or in pieces).
Television
- Alienated episode 2x07, "The Arrival"
- The Collector episode 2x05, "The Tattoo Artist"
- Veronica Mars episode 1x22, "Leave It to Beaver"
Movies
- David Cronenberg's Rabid (1977) (poster image)
Comic Books
Women in Refrigerators Syndrome
Stories in which women aren't necessarily put in actual refrigerators, but where their deaths, suffering, or otherwise unpleasant fates are used as plot devices in a male character's storyline.