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Question of the Week > How Do You Feel About Authors Writing Narrators Who Are Of A Different Gender/Sexuality/Race Than The Author? (4/25/21)

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message 1: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3455 comments Mod
What’s your take on an author choosing to write a main character or narrator who is of a different gender/sexuality/race than the author themselves (e.g., a male author writing a female narrator, a cis-gender writing a trans character, etc.)? Which books or authors have you read where this is done well and where it has failed?
(This question was inspired by the group’s current Borne discussion and comments Jenna made.)


message 2: by Luke (last edited Apr 25, 2021 08:50PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Depends on how much work an author puts into the piece before it's published and the resulting conversation afterward. Sensitivity readers are a thing these days, although if an author doesn't have anyone in their social circle that they truly respect who happens to be of the specific demographic they're writing about, it's probably going to show regardless. I wouldn't be surprised if this difference in social circles contributed to the major differences between Ishiguro's 'The Remains of the Day' and, say, Golding's 'Memoirs of a Geisha', which have instigated very different public conversations, as befits their respective handling of their cross-cultural/gendered material.

All in all, it's fashionable in some circles to argue that authors aren't responsible for this kind of thing, but money increasingly talks in ways outside of the literary status quo. Maintaining a mature conversation about proper representation that doesn't devolve into sealioning, slurs, and tone policing has become part of any publishing process that's actually invested in the people as a whole, and the work falls out accordingly.


message 3: by Robert (new)

Robert | 524 comments I remember seeing a talk with Bernardine Evaristo saying that an author has the right to write about anything, in fact I’m reading Mr. Loverman, which is told mostly through a male perspective. I agree but I can add ‘if written convincingly’ Now as a cis-gendered male, I’ll never go through pregnancy or motherhood but I guess if it tallies with my observations of pregnant women (my siblings, work colleagues) then I will find that convincing.


message 4: by Whitney (last edited Apr 25, 2021 08:44PM) (new)

Whitney | 2498 comments Mod
Robert wrote: "I remember seeing a talk with Bernardine Evaristo saying that an author has the right to write about anything, in fact I’m reading Mr. Loverman, which is told mostly through a male perspective. I a..."

No one, absolutely no one, is saying that authors don't have the right to write about anything they want. The problem is that some author's seem to think their right to say whatever what they want includes the right not to have anyone criticize them for it. As Aubrey said, they need to put in the work. If someone writes a character of a different race or gender and falls into offensive stereotypes, they will hear about it.


message 5: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 121 comments All I care about is the story . If the author has done the right job, then for me it just doesn't matter, and honestly I just don't pay that kind of attentionto books. It just seems to complicate reading, when for me reading is just enoyment, fun, a relief from reality, I just love to get lost in the story.


message 6: by Lark (last edited Apr 25, 2021 10:57PM) (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 729 comments The hashtag #ownvoices has significant meaning for me, as an autistic writer and reader. The term was conceived by autistic writer Corinne Duyvis, and refers to an author from a marginalized or under-represented group writing about their own experiences/from their own perspective, rather than someone from an outside perspective writing a given character from an underrepresented group.

That said, the notion that autistic people can write autistic characters any better than neurotypical people can isn't a given to me at all. I mean, how do you write an "autistic person" without tagging that person with some traits that might seem like stereotyping but that actually show up in a lot of autistic people? Why is it better for an autistic person to write about a character stimming, for instance, than it is for a non-autistic person to write about a character stimming?

I think it's good to keep having this conversation but I'm concerned at the way the conversation is going in some online forums, particularly when it comes to YA fiction.


message 7: by Robert (new)

Robert | 524 comments Whitney wrote: "Robert wrote: "I remember seeing a talk with Bernardine Evaristo saying that an author has the right to write about anything, in fact I’m reading Mr. Loverman, which is told mostly through a male p..."

That first sentence sounded harsh! I apologize if I did anything wrong


message 8: by Robert (new)

Robert | 524 comments lark wrote: "The hashtag #ownvoices has significant meaning for me, as an autistic writer and reader. The term was conceived by autistic writer Corinne Duyvis, and refers to an author from a marginalized or und..."

Or vice versa. The author Naoise Dolan is autistic and the characters in Exciting Times are realistic ( I didn't like the book too much as it felt like a Sally Rooney tribute, not because of the protagonists)


message 9: by Margaret (new)

Margaret An author has the right to write about any subject, from any POV. The point of literary criticism is to examine the quality of the work itself and my discomfort with much of mainstream lit crit is that it focuses on the author rather than the work. I choose to read a work and I choose to evaluate/enjoy/react to that work based on its merits, not whether the author has or has not experienced the exact things the characters in the novel experience. After all, there is some phenomenal SFF out there and I’m (pretty) sure those authors have never lived on other planets or waged war against robots.


message 10: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3455 comments Mod
I think a lot of the recent focus on the identity of the authors is not always about the literature itself or the author, but the publishing industry (the way the system is set up to overlook more talented but marginalized or minority writers, the way they market books, etc.). The loudest objections have usually been to literature that is subpar and does exactly what just about everyone in this post has said they don't want to see: a non-convincing, un-informed, sloppy, or outright disrespectful attempt to appropriate or capitalize on the narrative of a "culture" one doesn't identify with.

I prefer to know as little as possible about both the story and the author when I start reading, but of course some bit of info has to have got me interested in the book in the first place.

There's only one question I usually ask: Is the character believable? And that answer is based on my limited knowledge/experience. Thomas Cromwell seemed entirely believable and male to me in Mantel's trilogy. Rachel in VanderMeer's Borne felt genuine to me (i.e., I never paused to question her identity in any way or gave a second's thought to the author's ability to make the character authentic). Christopher in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time seems like a believable character to me, but his is one that is harder to judge for me because he's autistic and my direct experience and knowledge of autism is much more limited than my general experience of gender.


message 11: by Lark (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 729 comments I agree with you so much Margaret. Worse there is a strong tendency for even big-magazine literary critics writing about books to confuse a CHARACTER with a hateful world view with the author’s supposed view.

Or in the YA space there have been successful campaigns to stop a book’s publication because a character from an underrepresented community has unpleasant personality traits.

In a perfect world the book would be published and debated and what the author thinks or intended wouldn’t be part of the discussion, the book would stand on its own.

Now if an author is all on their own a bad person that’s another entirely different question about how to approach their art.


message 12: by Jenna (last edited Apr 26, 2021 11:49AM) (new)

Jenna | 157 comments I'm going to try again to explain my thoughts on this because I dont think I did a good job before. I think Vandermeer succeeds in giving us a fully developed character, because I felt like he is writing Rachel from the inside with his own emotions. That is why I wondered why he had chosen a female since it seemed so personal - why was he not comfortable making the nurturing character male? Not that he couldn't write a female, but because somehow it seemed more "natural" for him to place Rachel's personality in a woman. It isn't that a male cant write a female, but that until we examine how we subconsciously gender certain traits, our books will perpetuate stereotypes without us being aware of it. Its not enough to say "this character feels like a woman to me". Authors should ask themselves why they want that character to be female. Flip it in your mind and see if there is something that makes you uncomfortable doing it the other way and there you will find your gender stereotypes.


message 13: by Luke (new)

Luke (korrick) This question ultimately comes down to the difference between those who experience representation solely through the realm of entertainment, and those who are forced to live out the consequences of said representation. An author isn't morally obligated to do anything in particular to ensure their writing engages both groups. On the other hand, no one in particular is obligated to read them. Ideologically, this author could be an actual saint, but under the exigencies of capitalism, marketing is what sells the book, and these days, #ownvoices has as much pull with certain audiences, especially for those whom are particularly humanized by the writing, as the recommendations of Harold Bloom have with others looking to amplify their Occidental reading cred.

The friction comes when both sides of the question turn it into a moral debate, replicating the standoff as can be seen in such academic conflicts as New Criticism versus Critical Theory. Certain authors may get unfairly run off during the course of these struggles, but that's just another form of having one's manuscript rejected because publishers think it won't appeal enough to the demographical stronghold of the popular reading population, aka white middle aged middle class women. So, there's nothing new about this extrapolation of personal characteristics into deciding what to read/publish and what not to. There's just many more individual voices turning it into a personal question on a much more public scale as compared to corporations who can afford to keep all these debates completely under wraps.

It's all very dramatic, and I'm personally still waiting for fiction that can seriously involve on a literary level themes of being narcissistic/having a personality disorder without it devolving into a mewling puking fear mongering/inspiration porn fest that is pushed out so often these days. Ultimately, though, people can do what they want. It's just interesting to see what type of works are trumpeted by the mainstream to be completely and utterly 'normal', when in reality, there's no such thing. It's just another variation on the #ownvoices, albeit a tad more comfortable in its place prescripted by society.


message 14: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3455 comments Mod
I appreciate you taking the time to explain your thoughts, especially as it is a rather complicated dynamic/issue, Jenna. I also think it's helpful to look at particular books/characters because readers can begin to see when and why such instances do and don't work for themselves.

If we take Rachel from Borne as an example and we keep everything else the same in the book, it would have been vastly more challenging for VanderMeer to write the character as male in my opinion, as he then would have had to also be writing the sexual and romantic relationship from a gay standpoint (I felt the nurturing aspect of the character would have worked either way). That's just my opinion and I don't consider it any more right or wrong than yours, Jenna. Having never read VanderMeer before, I have no idea what his own emotions are or why he made such decisions. I do think there are a lot of subconscious processes at work when it comes to writing.

Are there instances where any of us feel this approach has been handled incredibly poorly (examples you've actually read and not just ones that got a lot of media attention)?


message 15: by Lily (last edited Apr 26, 2021 10:24AM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 2506 comments Marc wrote: "I also think it's helpful to look at particular books/characters because readers can begin to see when and why such instances do and don't work for themselves...."

I am stumbling on Brit Bennett's The Vanishing Half. Just how equivalent is comparing establishing ethnic identity with establishing gender identity? Is it a "valid" comparison she is making? To what purposes? When do analogies fall apart?

A article I found interesting (or perhaps just "fun" and thought provoking): https://walkerart.org/magazine/7-gend...


message 16: by Jenna (last edited Apr 26, 2021 11:50AM) (new)

Jenna | 157 comments Marc wrote: "I appreciate you taking the time to explain your thoughts, especially as it is a rather complicated dynamic/issue, Jenna. I also think it's helpful to look at particular books/characters because re..."

Lol, Marc, I was thinking about flipping Rachel and Wick, because I know VDM is hetero so I wasn't thinking a gay character either, and perhaps that would be more similar than different given stereotyping. In addition, I think my question arose with the initial set up, as the book develops there are certainly aspects of strength and weakness in both characters and the feeling of stereotyping in the framework falls away - maybe the sex scenes would have felt even more steroetyped with rachel male and wick female than the reactions to borne did, and ultimately that is why even though this book started the conversation, its not a very good example haha. In fact, Rachel even wonders why she thinks of Borne as male, showing that VDM is aware of the stereotyping impulses that go into that gendering.

I guess I think men and women are more similar than different - there is a huge range of personality - and if a male author thinks they need to "be" female to tell a particular story, that choice may be driven by unconscious biases. Whitney I think mentioned Alien somewhere and I think that is a great example, because writing a male character and then casting it a women gave us a very unique but totally believable female portrait exactly because the writer wasn't paying attention to gender during the writing!


message 17: by Whitney (last edited Apr 26, 2021 01:08PM) (new)

Whitney | 2498 comments Mod
I agree with Lark's critique, there's no guarantee that an autistic person can write an autistic character well. If we ever achieve adequate representation, we won't have to worry about one or two books bearing the entire brunt of accurate depictions. My understanding of the #ownvoices is that it's a correction for everyone being defined by the cis majority. As Marc pointed out, the publishing industry favors certain identities over others.

Regarding poor representations, I know Marc asked for less well known examples, but "American Dirt" by Jeanine Cummings sums things up so perfectly in showing who the industry decides gets to be a spokesperson; even when they are patently unqualified. The book's failings have been cataloged by more knowledgeable people than me. What struck me as most telling was Cummings stating that she wrote the book because no one before her had portrayed the experience of migrants fleeing violence in Mexico. She then went on to say she meticulously researched the book by reading writers like Luis Alberto Urrea, Sonia Nazario, and Óscar Martínez. Literally three writers who have written knowledgeably and accurately about that exact experience, and yet "no one before her wrote about it". Because, apparently, if you aren't a white American, you are no one.

It's easy to say "publish everyone and let people make up their own minds". But there is a vast publishing industry that is already doing the gatekeeping. It's just the gatekeeping wasn't an issue as long as it was only keeping out mostly minority voices.


message 18: by Lark (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 729 comments Robert wrote: "Or vice versa. The author Naoise Dolan is autistic and the characters in Exciting Times are realistic..."

But see, I felt instantly at home in Dolan's language, from the first paragraph, and only later did I find out she was autistic.

If I were to describe Dolan's language and what makes it different, it's her hyper-attention to sound and also to other senses. I read this book with such pleasure on a purely semantic level. The time Dolan takes to define words, too, and to pin down meanings concretely, I found so satisfying.

For me it was an entirely different reading experience than reading Rooney's books, where I find the language to be annoyingly imprecise.

I don't know if Dolan meant to write an autistic narrator, but to me Ava experiences the world autistically.


message 19: by James E. (new)

James E. Martin | 78 comments I happened to have just finished Arthur Nersesian's "Mesopotamia" and his technique worked well: basically over-the-counter and satirical in his narrator - Korean woman who had been adopted by Jewish Liberal parents living in rural Tennessee who works as a tabloid journalist in NYC who has a drinking problem, had had trouble bringing a baby to term and is the middle of a divorce...


message 20: by James E. (new)

James E. Martin | 78 comments Note: "over - the-top" not over the counter, (dumb auto-correct)!


message 21: by Marc (last edited Apr 27, 2021 05:25AM) (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3455 comments Mod
I like “over-the-counter”—-it’s like the type of character you could expect to get at the pharmacy. :D

I wonder if satire or larger-than-life type of characters make it easier to write across identities...

Jenna, I’m suddenly picturing a future literature where one can request alternative versions of every book where the reader chooses the identities of the characters each time the same way video games allow one to customize a character. For my next version of Borne, I’ll go with your swap of Wick and Rachel, Mord and Borne will swap roles, but Borne will wear a cape when flying and obnoxious feather boas.

Why does YA seem more engulfed in these type of debates than other genres or literature for adults, or is that just a misperception on my part?


message 22: by Lark (new)

Lark Benobi (larkbenobi) | 729 comments Marc wrote: "Why does YA seem more engulfed in these type of debates than other genres or literature for adults, or is that just a misperception on my part?..."

Not a misperception imo Marc. I think it's a combination of

1) the young readers of these books are on the whole much more progressive than an older audience, and want to change the world, and

2) they are still somewhat naive readers, and

3) social media works best and will bring the poster the most glory when the message is simple--e.g. "THIS BOOK IS BI-PHOBIC AND TRANSPHOBIC TRASH!"

(to quote a recent 'review' I read recently, by a poster who hadn't read the book, about a book written by a gay Kanaka Maoli writer, about his experience with homophobia and racism while growing up in Hawaii.)


message 23: by Luke (last edited Apr 27, 2021 07:57PM) (new)

Luke (korrick) Marc wrote: "Why does YA seem more engulfed in these type of debates than other genres or literature for adults, or is that just a misperception on my part?"

YA literature is regularly and hugely disproportionally targeted by book banning campaigns and other form of ideological censorship on the basis of the works tackling the realities of diversity, especially in regards to anything touching upon Black or queer realities. As is often the case, the loudest representatives of the status quo prefer any representation to be filtered down into palatable misrepresentations, with anything that is too "real" being demonized as unfit for the tender eyes of children who may very well have to live through the reality of these issues regardless. I'm sure there are younger readers who have some measure of clout in unfairly throwing vitriol on various works via social media, but they aren't the ones driving the book banning statistics that organizations like the American Library Association collect on a yearly basis. If you want a portrait of what's actually going on, you'd be better off looking at any kind of white collar suburban area with a HOA attached and a penchant for suing entire library systems because their information networks aren't draconian enough.


message 24: by Clarke (new)

Clarke Owens | 165 comments It's fine if it works. One of my favorite novels of all time is My Antonia by Willa Cather, which is narrated from a male point of view. On the other hand, I've never believed (or cared for) the final chapter of Joyce's Ulysses.


message 25: by Vesna (new)

Vesna (ves_13) | 235 comments Mod
Clarke wrote: "It's fine if it works. One of my favorite novels of all time is My Antonia by Willa Cather, which is narrated from a male point of view. On the other hand, I've never believed (or cared for) the fi..."

A couple of years ago, when I was thinking about my favorite books published that year, I noticed that the top two books were written by female authors in the male first-person narrative, The Man Who Saw Everything by Deborah Levy and The Dutch House by Ann Patchett. I didn’t even think about it while reading either novel, only showing how it can be seamless when well done. In his recent autofiction The Topeka School, Lerner alternates the chapters between his father, his mother, and himself as the first-person narrator and I thought he was most successful with his mother Jane’s narrative. I hope one day he expands on it with the entire book written as Jane, a fascinating character. Among the male playwrights, for whom each character speaks in her/his own voice, I think Ibsen was the master in giving voice to his female characters, especially in A Doll's House and Hedda Gabler. Tennessee Williams too.


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