Meta -- Female Characters; Male Writers
In two of the shows that I actually bother to watch regularly these days, the female characters are not well-written (and while this bugs the hell out of me, the guys are written interestingly enough that I don't want to give up on the shows in question). And I think that a lot of the bad female writing comes not from having male writers, per se, but from having male writers who love their female characters too shallowly.
Because the problem is not in loving your characters -- I can't write a character that I don't adore. And if I do write a character that I don't like? I'll love them while I'm writing the story. When I'm writing (and I always write from a character's pov, never omniscient), I'm in the character's head. And that means that I absolutely must explain their actions to myself, in a way that makes sense and is sympathetic. Because, as Tom Ripley once said, "It all makes sense, in your head. Nobody thinks that they're a bad person." Even people who assume the worst of themselves don't make themselves villains, they make themselves victims.
But that love comes from living inside that character's head. This is the kind of love that makes Joss Whedon remark on a dvd commentary that the moment he loves Buffy the most is when she's shooting that rocket launcher at the Judge in Innocence. This is not at all the same as the love that inspires the writers of Lana Lang on Smallville or Sam on Stargate SG-1.
Infatuation is dangerously easy to confuse with love -- you see it all the time in fiction (and in real life, but we aren't talking about that). Lust is easier to recognise, being body-based. When someone is drooling over a beauty, it's a simple matter to figure out that they're feeling lust, not love.
Infatuation, though, is harder to tell from love. Similar to lust, it can strike at first sight, but because it's not always about the physical, it's easy to think that it's an overpowering bolt from the blue, a sign from the divine that you've found your one true love (in fact, I'd actually put lust down as a subset under infatuation if it weren't such a huge part of it all).
Lust blinds the afflicted to all but the most base qualities of the admired. Infatuation can appear to be focused on a healthier and more lasting bond.
If I were speaking of characters, I would go on to talk about how to turn lust or infatuation into love, but right now, I'm talking about writers and that is a whole different ball game.
Because in real life, relationships either falter after the initial flush of attraction or they grow into something more. But with writers, there's a new element -- they are the ones in control of their object of affection. Because of this, there's no reason for the writers to move beyond the state of infatuation. There's no reason to change their beloved out of the mold that they adore them in.
Sam cannot change, because if she did, she would no longer be the Sam that the writers adore. Lana can't grow, because to make her a real girl would mean giving her real faults and that would push her off that pedestal.
And so, with House, I'm wondering just how self-aware the writers are. Because this is something that I do, truly, admire about Joss Whedon -- his tremendous awareness of women as people and not objects. Buffy was a real woman, with faults and virtues and contradiction. Willow, for all that I don't like her that much, also rings very real to me. And Joss is, of course, smart enough to realise that having strong female writers helps you write strong female characters.
But I love Joss' writing style over all -- his pattern is to take a stereotype and slowly break it down to reveal a real person behind it.
Because there's another key element, too -- for all their love of Lana, I don't get the feeling that the Smallville writers care all that much for women in general. And if you don't care for an entire subset of people while taking a couple of individuals from that subset and raising them up on a pedestal, you end up with a couple of 'too perfect' characters and a whole bunch of extremely ignored ones.
And Joss likes people, very much including women. He likes people in the same way that I like people, which is quite possibly another reason that I always end up adoring his work so much -- we share a very similar worldview.
People are fascinating, so much so that even when I don't like someone, I find them interesting. I truly believe that there is no such thing as a dull person (dull characters? yes. people? no.). Even someone who lives a dull life is a whole world entire, with unseen currents and hidden waterfalls. We live in a world that is both enormous and tiny, partly so because there are billions upon billions of separate lives, bumping together and drifting apart again, captive universes huddled inside a small town or racing down narrow streets.
People do not exist for us to interact with -- that is the cardinal sin that bad writers make, creating characters that only exist to impact the main character. All characters should impact the main character(s), but each one is unique, never to be seen again. Each traveling down its own road, crossing the main character's path, but they are separate roads, not stops along the way.
There are many writers who are otherwise good but who can't write women. Their men are complex, but their women are so simple by comparison. And it's because they cannot make the connection that women are people. They separate women out, make them special.
This is the question playing out on House right now -- do the writers view women as people?
We'll see.
Because the problem is not in loving your characters -- I can't write a character that I don't adore. And if I do write a character that I don't like? I'll love them while I'm writing the story. When I'm writing (and I always write from a character's pov, never omniscient), I'm in the character's head. And that means that I absolutely must explain their actions to myself, in a way that makes sense and is sympathetic. Because, as Tom Ripley once said, "It all makes sense, in your head. Nobody thinks that they're a bad person." Even people who assume the worst of themselves don't make themselves villains, they make themselves victims.
But that love comes from living inside that character's head. This is the kind of love that makes Joss Whedon remark on a dvd commentary that the moment he loves Buffy the most is when she's shooting that rocket launcher at the Judge in Innocence. This is not at all the same as the love that inspires the writers of Lana Lang on Smallville or Sam on Stargate SG-1.
Infatuation is dangerously easy to confuse with love -- you see it all the time in fiction (and in real life, but we aren't talking about that). Lust is easier to recognise, being body-based. When someone is drooling over a beauty, it's a simple matter to figure out that they're feeling lust, not love.
Infatuation, though, is harder to tell from love. Similar to lust, it can strike at first sight, but because it's not always about the physical, it's easy to think that it's an overpowering bolt from the blue, a sign from the divine that you've found your one true love (in fact, I'd actually put lust down as a subset under infatuation if it weren't such a huge part of it all).
Lust blinds the afflicted to all but the most base qualities of the admired. Infatuation can appear to be focused on a healthier and more lasting bond.
If I were speaking of characters, I would go on to talk about how to turn lust or infatuation into love, but right now, I'm talking about writers and that is a whole different ball game.
Because in real life, relationships either falter after the initial flush of attraction or they grow into something more. But with writers, there's a new element -- they are the ones in control of their object of affection. Because of this, there's no reason for the writers to move beyond the state of infatuation. There's no reason to change their beloved out of the mold that they adore them in.
Sam cannot change, because if she did, she would no longer be the Sam that the writers adore. Lana can't grow, because to make her a real girl would mean giving her real faults and that would push her off that pedestal.
And so, with House, I'm wondering just how self-aware the writers are. Because this is something that I do, truly, admire about Joss Whedon -- his tremendous awareness of women as people and not objects. Buffy was a real woman, with faults and virtues and contradiction. Willow, for all that I don't like her that much, also rings very real to me. And Joss is, of course, smart enough to realise that having strong female writers helps you write strong female characters.
But I love Joss' writing style over all -- his pattern is to take a stereotype and slowly break it down to reveal a real person behind it.
Because there's another key element, too -- for all their love of Lana, I don't get the feeling that the Smallville writers care all that much for women in general. And if you don't care for an entire subset of people while taking a couple of individuals from that subset and raising them up on a pedestal, you end up with a couple of 'too perfect' characters and a whole bunch of extremely ignored ones.
And Joss likes people, very much including women. He likes people in the same way that I like people, which is quite possibly another reason that I always end up adoring his work so much -- we share a very similar worldview.
People are fascinating, so much so that even when I don't like someone, I find them interesting. I truly believe that there is no such thing as a dull person (dull characters? yes. people? no.). Even someone who lives a dull life is a whole world entire, with unseen currents and hidden waterfalls. We live in a world that is both enormous and tiny, partly so because there are billions upon billions of separate lives, bumping together and drifting apart again, captive universes huddled inside a small town or racing down narrow streets.
People do not exist for us to interact with -- that is the cardinal sin that bad writers make, creating characters that only exist to impact the main character. All characters should impact the main character(s), but each one is unique, never to be seen again. Each traveling down its own road, crossing the main character's path, but they are separate roads, not stops along the way.
There are many writers who are otherwise good but who can't write women. Their men are complex, but their women are so simple by comparison. And it's because they cannot make the connection that women are people. They separate women out, make them special.
This is the question playing out on House right now -- do the writers view women as people?
We'll see.
no subject
But with writers, there's a new element -- they are the ones in control of their object of affection. Because of this, there's no reason for the writers to move beyond the state of infatuation. There's no reason to change their beloved out of the mold that they adore them in.
I finally realized why I've been having so many problems with certain fanfic authors interpretation of some of my favorite characters. There's an infatuation at work which doesn't allow for the nuance I see. Thank you - at least now I understand why their stories irritate me so much.
(no subject)
no subject
And I have little doubt that that isn't what the creators intended (and it would be much less annoying if we spent a little less time with the girl), but screw 'em. It makes sense to me. ;-)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
People are fascinating, so much so that even when I don't like someone, I find them interesting. I truly believe that there is no such thing as a dull person (dull characters? yes. people? no.). Even someone who lives a dull life is a whole world entire, with unseen currents and hidden waterfalls.
Very true. Of course, in real life, I admit that I generally don't want to know nearly that much about people; I'm far more comfortable looking at them when they're fictional. Straying OT, this is why I hate it when people within a complex fandom (usually HP, in my case) brush off or try to stifle discussion (or fanfic) of a particular character because they're "one-dimensional" or they just "don't have any depth." It's one thing to say that as a discussion of the author or writers, but not as a commentary on the actual characters. Once you've got a fandom that provides you with plenty of characters that seem human, most discussion on them treats them as though they're real people; when we try to explain a character's personality or motivation, we avoid saying, "Well, it was really convenient for the storyline to have a character who does X, so this character does X." These discussions are why I'm in fandom. Despite that, some people dislike hearing certain characters (frequently Draco) discussed that way, so they go on about how the character is boring and has no depth. This doesn't work, because we take characters in the fandom as real, and there are *no* real people without depth, whether or not they choose to show it to everyone. We have less information to work from for some characters, but that doesn't mean there aren't layers and "real" personalities to explore.
(no subject)
no subject
Even someone who lives a dull life is a whole world entire, with unseen currents and hidden waterfalls. We live in a world that is both enormous and tiny, partly so because there are billions upon billions of separate lives, bumping together and drifting apart again, captive universes huddled inside a small town or racing down narrow streets.
People are incredible and beautiful and I am always really sad when other people don't get that part of what makes us so fascinating are the nasty little faults and shortcomings. It makes us real. I don't love so many of my characters despite them being an asshole. I love them because of it.
(no subject)
no subject
I used to really, really hope that TIIC are writing her that way on purpose. It fits in with her character's abandonment issues, and the "wishing rock" nature of the meteorites, that Lana would exude a sort of aura that would make people love her without reservation, want to be near her and crave her approval.
But then S2 started and any hopes I had for actual, sensible, character development flew out the window.
One man who writes good women, imho, is Robert Jordan. :startles: And, since WoT is in your interests, I guess you must at least find them acceptable. ;-)
I was gonna use a CLex icon, but I think I'll use my WoT icon instead.
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
This whole subject is something I've thought about on and off over the years, especially in regards to some book series I read which I loved but in which the women were written not so much as three dimensional characters as strange entities that didn't react in any way a rational person would, but who were "cute" and "adorable" all the same.
I finally came to the conclusion that it seemed there were very few men that could get inside a woman character's head and write her in a way I could believe she was real. The whole infatuation angle wasn't one I considered, but... yes. It fits.
Luckily there are a few men out there who have proven that they can write woman characters who are as real and complex as male characters. Joss is certainly one of them. Also JMS -- one of the things about Babylon 5 that so fascinated me was that there was no weak characters -- the women were as strong and as flawed and as well developed as the men.
It's still a very rare thing though; hopefully it'll become less rare with time.
(no subject)
no subject
This is a great post and sums up a lot of what I've been thinking about when I watch TV recently.
I've been watching House fairly consistently this season, and I have a lot of the same problems with the writing as you and many other people. At least with Cameron.
I think that the show is written from House's POV, for the most part. And accordingly the only two characters that are fleshed out at all besides House are Cuddy and Wilson, the two people closest to him. It explains why the ducklings are often one dimensional and why Vogler was beyond one dimensional. I think that's why the "courtship" between Cameron and House is progressing how it is. Because House sees her as a pretty, young, naive pollyanna and he both doesn't like that and craves that. However, it won't be until next week or maybe even the end of the season that I could say for sure if it's intentional for the writers - and will be going to an interesting place - or if it's just poor writing.
(no subject)
no subject
People are fascinating, so much so that even when I don't like someone, I find them interesting. I truly believe that there is no such thing as a dull person (dull characters? yes. people? no.). Even someone who lives a dull life is a whole world entire, with unseen currents and hidden waterfalls. We live in a world that is both enormous and tiny, partly so because there are billions upon billions of separate lives, bumping together and drifting apart again, captive universes huddled inside a small town or racing down narrow streets.
Yes, this is so true. This is why any character who seem like a real, live person can never be dull to me. If a writer finds one of their own characters dull, they are probably doing something wrong with them. I do think it's possible to create good characters that you don't like (even though I would probably not be able to write characters I don't, on some level, like myself), but it's not possible to create a good character, if you find them dull. You must find something in them that makes them interesting. And you always can with a real human being, so you should be able to, in a character as well.
(no subject)
no subject
I'm not familiar with "House", but I've definitely felt the Lana-infatuation you mention, and seen similar character-focused infatuations in fanfic and stories before. It's a pitfall of being a creator. Sometimes, folks get so enamored of a character that they lose the ability to soo how characters need to grow and change. (Because that's admitting to a flaws, and the infatuated person hates doing that.) Some writers just fall into that trap, and some start out that way on purpose. Subconsciously, anyway. (Smallville)
(no subject)