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Female Ass-Kickers Opinion Article

Common issues with strong female characters

Opinion by Mermaid-Tail posted over a year ago
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Three issues I wish were less common with strong female characters.

1 She's a strong female star...unlike the rest of her whiny gender
I've seen a fair few strong female characters who hang mainly with boys. Not a problem, until it's revealed she so does because she doesn't have the patience for the giggling, boy obsessed simpletons that make up the rest of the female population. This is, to me, a dangerous one, because on the surface it's feminist, the tough tomboy who can cut it with the lads, but it's actually fairly sexist. It's not representing a world where women have the potential to be tough or smart, it's a character who by some anomaly mutated into an ovary haver without the inherent lameness of being female. The sweeping generalisation, often mentioned in passing, the idea she can't have female friends because she doesn't care about shoes and likes to be outdoorsy, perpetuates the notion that the vast majority of females are still that shrieking stereotype of a girly girl. It always bugs me seeing an otherwise solid female role model casually write off the rest of her gender as worthless. The amount of girls relating enough to these main characters to buy their stories proves those characters have enough similar females, yet the idea thrives. The sad thing is it's an issue I see slightly more often in books written by women.

2. Tomboy = tough, Girly = not
Some seem to feel the quickest way to let the audience know which female characters they're meant to see as tough and which as weak is to tell them who likes things like camping vs who likes shoes. Like it's automatic in some writer's eyes. Girly girls are the bitchy antagonists or at best the kindly damsels, tomboys are tough. Not having time for girly nonsense is practically a free pass to ass-kicker land, regardless of actual strength. As someone in some ways fairly girly myself, and also someone who could kick more butt in a pair of heels than my brother can in boots, it's not an idea I'm thrilled with. Not only are girliness and strength not mutually exclusive, but liking things like sports or mechanics does not automatically make you brave or strong. Unless you're fictional.

3. Strong women can do anything...except fail
If there's one thing certain feminists and certain sexists seem to actually agree on, it's this. As soon as a female character fails she is worthless. One type of character I'd love to see a female version of is the 'Malcolm Reynolds' type. One who, while maintaining respect in the audience's eyes, sometimes fails, has skill but gets their ass kicked a fair share of the time, does morally shady things but remains good. Basically, a character who occasionally kinda sucks at being the hero, but still is. Even from writers I trust to provide me with strong and diverse females I struggle to think of one with similar success to sucking ratio as a Mal. I think it's in part fear of audience response, as it could risk scorn from both sides. Certain types of feminist could view it as sexism that this woman was struggling with her role as strong, sexists would take it as proof that this girl butt kicker wasn't up to scratch. That kind of mindset, holding female characters to standards the males don't face, does nothing but hold us back from getting the same range of fictional representatives men have (and who doesn't enjoy watching a Malcolm Reynolds style character? Serial killers, that's who)

I should say, the basics of these points aren't all necessarily bad, it's when it's done a certain way. A female character who hangs around mainly with males has as much potential to be great as one who hangs mainly with other girls, a tomboy can rock and a character with a high success rate can be realistic and cool. It's only bad to me when done in the ways mentioned above, which are too common for my liking.
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4 comments

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Takuya said:
This is very interesting and usefull for me because I want to become a writer.

Do you have any exapmles of characthers that have these problems so I can get a better "look" at them?
Or could you give me some tips on good Strong female character?

Anyway thanks alot for this great article.
posted over a year ago.
 
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fanfly said:
I couldn't agree with you more. Especially about point 3. It's a huge pet peeve of mine! I hate the double standard of how nobody blinks an eye when male characters show weaknesses/failures but female characters are so much more harshly judged when they do the same. And I hate that a lot of the criticism comes from so-called 'feminists' because the principle is so blatantly sexist. I mean feminism is about equality!
posted over a year ago.
 
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glelsey said:
Great article! I just read through it a couple of times while looking over some biographies of the two female leads for a fictional series I am working on. You wouldn't believe how helpful it's been!

I've always hated it when I've seen the third issue present in books, TV, film, etc. because I actually like it when heroic characters are portrayed as "imperfect". I think it makes them more appealing and easier to relate to, but if said character is female everyone seems to turn against them!

The first two points interested me too, as my two strong female characters I was just looking into are in fact a tomboy and a girly girl! Looking at their traits, I'm hoping I'm safe from having them fall into the "too common" rut, but I will watch out. It may actually be a blessing that they aren't both tomboys or both girly; it'll give me a chance to make sure they are both strong regardless of their interests.

Thanks for writing and sharing this article. Like I said, it's been a great help to me. And I have a feeling it'll be helpful to quite a few other people too!
posted over a year ago.
 
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pandawinx said:
Fabulous entry!
I agree 100%, and think you raised some really good, thoughtful issues. Especially number 3. I like female characters to be...realistic.
posted over a year ago.