E.L. Tettensor's Blog, page 2

March 4, 2015

Just a Girl

So, I’m pretty new on the SFF scene. By and large, I don’t have strong opinions on most of the longstanding debates the genre community loves to mull over. But let me tell you, there’s nothing like writing an epic fantasy with a female protagonist to throw you face first into the boiling, often belligerent discussion of gender in SFF.


At first, I just observed from the sidelines, taking it all in and trying to keep an open mind. Lately, though, I’ve become increasingly conscious of a particular pattern, one which depresses me and annoys me in equal measure, and I feel the need to comment on it.


I’m not talking about the Big Debate here — whether authors are under some kind of obligation to represent women (or any other under-represented group) in their fiction regardless of the type of story they’re trying to tell. I do have views on that, but they aren’t the subject of this post.


I’m talking about the way we discuss female characters, and what they supposedly represent. I’m talking about the fact that female characters are necessarily assumed to represent something.


It bothers me. A lot.


Let me start here: I’m not a huge fan of the Bechdel Test. (All right, all right – put away your pitchforks and torches and just hear me out.) I think the Bechdel Test does as well as any boilerplate benchmark could, but I have a problem with boilerplate benchmarks. I can think of plenty of stories that don’t pass the Bechdel Test that I would classify as not only satisfactory in their portrayal of gender relations, but downright important. In some cases, the fact that the woman is the lone example of her kind, surrounded by men, is in fact the whole point. Using the Bechdel Test as the sole means of assigning “pass” or “fail” on gender is lazy. (Also, if taken too literally — “the President is a dude therefore two secret service women discussing an assassination plot against him doesn’t count” — it becomes absurd.)


Secondly, why do we still — still! — feel obliged to analyse every female protagonist down to her toenail polish? To scrutinise and dissect her as if she’s an exotic specimen from an alien land? To assign Great Meaning to her every word and deed — not just as a character, but as an ambassador of her sex? We don’t do this with male protagonists. Why? Because the hero isn’t a symbol of all humanity.* He’s just a guy. When we analyse his actions, it’s as an individual, in the context of his specific circumstances. His every move is not presumed to be a commentary on gender relations.


And what gets me – what really depresses me about this – is that it’s most often the people pushing for better representations of women in fiction who are most guilty of this. The very people decrying stereotypical portrayals of women are the ones generalising about women, or the author’s attitudes about women, through the actions of a single female character. Don’t they get why this is wrong? Just because this woman is insecure doesn’t mean all women are insecure. Just because she struggles to be taken seriously doesn’t mean all women do, or that men don’t. It means she’s an individual with flaws and idiosyncrasies. It means she’s human.


Also: having a female character cry, or experience fear, or any other type of “weakness” is not only fine, it’s recommended. To the extent that such things are more common with female characters than male ones, this isn’t a shortcoming in the way women are portrayed, it’s a shortcoming in the way men are portrayed. Human weakness is real. The fact that heroes (especially fantasy heroes) aren’t allowed to express that as often as they should is a shame. It doesn’t mean we should replicate that mistake with heroines. When we do, we end up with a Mary Sue and dear God RELEASE THE HOUNDS! (Gary Stu is totes fine, tho.)


What I want to say to these people is this: If there’s a pattern among the female characters, then by all means – fire away. But if you’re basing your conclusions on the actions of a single character, you’re doing it wrong. You’re asking authors to walk an impossible tightrope, whereby every female character has to be a shining example of her sex – but not too shining, please, or she’s a Mary Sue.


This does a disservice not only to authors and the art of good storytelling, but also to women, because it discourages nuanced, diverse portrayals of women in the genre. And isn’t that what we want?


Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, folks. And sometimes a girl is just a girl.


*I’m adding an asterisk for those pedants out there who feel tempted to point out the handful of examples where the hero is, in fact, a symbol. Yes, these examples exist. And are entirely beside the point.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 04, 2015 05:51

February 16, 2015

What If: The art of worldbuilding

Today I stopped by SF Signal to talk about worldbuilding, and especially the approach I used in Master of Plagues. I actually use the words “Theory of Change”, which proves that last week’s guest post on Pornokitsch didn’t quite exhaust my appetite for pretentious theories.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 16, 2015 04:14

February 11, 2015

Guest Post: Redefining Genre

Today I stopped by the wonderful pornokitsch.com to drastically over-think the concept of genre in fantasy. If you love to see simple things needlessly problematised, this post is for you! I’m totally hoping this one gets published in a refereed journal.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2015 08:33

February 6, 2015

Guest Post: The Qwillery

The Master of Plagues blog tour comes to an end today. (sniffle!) Our final stop is The Qwillery, where I talk about the real-world origins of Master of Plagues, and the thought process that went into the story.


Enjoy!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 06, 2015 05:02

Review: That’s What I’m Talking About

Yesterday on That’s What I’m Talking About, Gikany and Una shared their thoughts on Master of Plagues. As always, theirs is a thoughtful take, definitely worth checking out.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 06, 2015 00:08

February 5, 2015

Interview: Fresh Fiction

Today on the blog tour, I’m over at Fresh Fiction answering some very insightful questions from the lovely Pasha! Swing by and take a look!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 05, 2015 00:53

February 4, 2015

Daily Double!

Happy Belated Book Birthday to Master of Plagues! (Cue confetti, marching band, and vuvuzelas.)


I was out in the field yesterday, and out of internet range, so I didn’t manage to properly celebrate release day, but in case you missed it, Master of Plagues is now available!


In the meantime, the blog tour went on without me. Yesterday, I revealed my secret superpower at The Skiffy and Fanty Show (spoiler: it’s teleportation). And today, I stopped by Not Yet Read to ask the most fundamental question of the SFF world: how much fantasy do you want in your fantasy?


They’re both a lot of fun. Take a look!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 04, 2015 08:06

February 2, 2015

Interview: SFF World

Happy Monday! Today’s stop on the MASTER OF PLAGUES blog tour is at SFF World, where I answer a few questions about life, the universe, and everything. Well… myself, Master of Plagues, and the Bloodbound, anyway.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 02, 2015 03:38

January 31, 2015

Review: Drey’s Library

Another nice review of Master of Plagues, courtesy of Drey’s Library. Why not wander over and take a gander?


Oh, and for the record, I think Merden might be my favourite too.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 31, 2015 00:33

January 29, 2015

Tough Travelling: Law enforcement in fantasy

Today’s blog tour stop is the Fantasy Review Barn, where I take part in a weekly column called “Tough Travelling”. This week’s topic is law enforcement in fantasy, and I take the opportunity to describe the process of creating the Kennian Metropolitan Police.


Drop round and take a look!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 29, 2015 23:06