Frank Miller test
It began here. It refers to the original Miller Test and also to the Shortpacked take on Frank Miller. It is applied to male sci-fi and fantasy writers, and it goes like this:
- If the proportion of female sex workers to neutrally presented female people in his story is above 1:1, he fails.
Failure is an indication that the writer is suffering from a debilitating obsession with whores, and may be assuming that all women can be represented by sex workers.
Notable Failures
- Frank Miller - Sin City
- CS Lewis - Ministering Angels
- China Mieville - Iron Council / The Perpetual Train - Arguably intentional in order to show prostitutes organizing.
Arguable failures
- Terry Pratchett - Night Watch - Includes one confirmed sex-worker (Rosie Palm); one probable sex-worker (Madam); non-sex-workers (Sandra, Cherry Littlebottom, [[Sybil Vimes]). The agony Aunts are involved but are not themselves prostitutes, and other tertiary characters do not necessarily appear to be involved with prostitution. However, since Night Watch is something of a pastiche of Les Miserables (in which prostitution plays a visible and plot relevant part), the presence of sex workers as characters is arguably not an entirely bad sign.
See also
- This article is a SEED, meaning it is tiny and needs lots of work. Help it grow.