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Perhaps it's different in the fantasy genre which I read and write often and which tends to have medieval sensibilities. I suppose if you are talking genres like the paranormal romances or erotica, promiscuity is more typical in heroic female protagonists, but that hasn't been my experience with my genre of choice. Traditionally, the heroic fantasy maiden is pure, and once married is true to her spouse. You might run into the occasional barbarian woman in a fantasy novel who is promiscuous, or the odd female rogue who sleeps around, but in either case it is still portrayed in a negative light - she is "uncivilized" or "crass", whereas the equivalent male character is just sowing his wild oats.Considering your background, I can understand your outlook regarding this subject. I do have many female and male characters who share your views, and in Magic University, there is a discussion regarding the idea early in the book. One of the characters makes it clear that she doesn't think Nia's behaviour is appropriate, but at the same time, she also points out she thinks her partner's behaviour is worse, since he has a betrothed and Nia does not. I like to present a variety of perspectives, and let people come to their own conclusions. All I ask is that people not vilify female characters for behaviour that they would deem acceptable in a male character. If you would take them both to task for the same behaviour, clearly, there's no double standard there.
Chantal wrote: "All I ask is that people not vilify female characters for behaviour that they would deem acceptable in a male character." Chantal, that's a 100% reasonable thing to ask; I'm with you all the way there!Presenting a variety of perspectives for readers to think about and come to their own conclusions is a good, constructive approach. If more modern fiction writers did that, it might actually encourage readers TO think!
My story collection The Smoking Gun Sisterhood (which is currently out of print) features female protagonists, on one side of the law or the other, who pack guns and kick butt. The focus of the stories tends to be on action, not male/female relationships; but aspects of the latter are touched on sometimes (more in some stories than others). Where that comes up, I basically tried to present constructive sexual messages, and only one of the heroines is promiscuous. But she's not depicted as being an evil person because of it (of course, she's a professional assassin, which makes her occasional one-night stands look like a pretty minor transgression by comparison --but even given her occupation, she's not as bad a human being as you might think). Where her promiscuity is touched on in passing, I tried to explain it understandably, and to bring out the fact that she didn't find it a fulfilling substitute for real intimacy. If I ever get the collection back in print, I hope readers will take a balanced view of her character, and not "vilify" her as beyond the pale, or beyond redemption, just because she's been sexually active!



In my own writing, the characters' sex lives aren't generally an area of interest, so I haven't had to deal with this in practice. Being an evangelical Christian, I believe that human happiness is best served when people respect sex as an expression of marital love; so where my writing does touch on that area, I try to convey the message that NOT everybody is promiscuous, that women deserve respect, and that faithful love is a good thing. It's important, IMO, to have some fiction that conveys that idea, in a popular culture where virtually all the messages people are bombarded with proclaim the opposite. I'm very opposed to the traditional double standard, which I think is disgustingly sexist; I don't like selfish, sexually exploitative treatment of other people as things to be used, whether it's by a male or a female character.
That said, fiction has to reflect life, and writers who create a character have to let that character be free to be who he/she intrinsically is --even if their morals aren't the same as the writer's. And in fiction as in life, there are men and women who are promiscuous, for a variety of reasons; they aren't necessarily unsympathetic characters or bad humans for it. A writer can create them, and depict the truth of their lives, without endorsing the promiscuity; and a reader can like them despite some behavior he/she might not approve of. C. L. Moore's Jirel of Joiry is one of my favorite characters in sword-and-sorcery fantasy, and she remarks in one story that she's "no stranger to the ways of light loving." Like her hot temper and her swearing, that's a vice realistically common to her class in that time and place, but she's a good person at her core, who (like your Nia) has integrity and willingness to risk and sacrifice for others. She is who she is, and Moore, I think, did exactly right to portray her just the way she did. So I guess that's my round-about way of arriving at the conclusion that I basically agree with you. :-)