SimonDoom
Kink Lord
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2015
- Posts
- 17,383
That would be awesome! An idea I'm sure nobody had before.
Nobody's done it the way I would do it!
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That would be awesome! An idea I'm sure nobody had before.
Nobody's done it the way I would do it!
Nobody's done it the way I would do it!
Realistically, the rest of the story would be a quest for the right bra while complaining about his back ache.Yeah! At first you could have, like, a scene where he stands in front of a mirror, and gropes his boobs, because the readers won’t know exactly how hot he is now if you don’t tell them! Like, he would totally have 36DD’s, amiright?
Realistically, the rest of the story would be a quest for the right bra while complaining about his back ache.
Have you seen this short clip the BBC made? About women "asking for it".And feeling seriously creeped out by all the old wankers thinking they’re so smooth while drooling all over him.
Come to think of it, some of the women I know in real life wouldn't be believable in fiction. Some of the men too.And honestly, your ladies don't have to be believable in real life if they behave believably in the situations of the story's confines.
Yeah! At first you could have, like, a scene where he stands in front of a mirror, and gropes his boobs, because the readers won’t know exactly how hot he is now if you don’t tell them! Like, he would totally have 36DD’s, amiright?
I've installed one of those gadgets you get at the deli counter, where you print out a number and it gets called out when the server is ready for the nextTouche.
OTOH, "Alien" was written with all the roles gender-blind - though the makers acknowledged they'd assumed Ripley would be male - and I rarely hear people complain that it's not interesting.Obviously, there's a massive overlap between genders. Men and women are obviously all people.
In a large number of stories, one can search/replace "John" with "Jane", and, aside from the physiological differnces, the behaviour and motivation of the character won't necessarily require a big rewrite.
But I think those stories aren't particularly interesting.
This ignores all the structural factors that make it easier or harder for certain populations to write plausibly about others.Either you can imagine people who aren’t similar to you or you can’t.
This ignores all the structural factors that make it easier or harder for certain populations to write plausibly about others.
Power, for example. There remain many fields where accurately modeling a man's thought processes is an essential professional skill. Whereas an unfortunate number of men get along just fine without any clue how women think.
Or representation in media. If I want to write a conversation between two men, not about a woman, I can crib from any number of existing works. Two women, not about a man? That's harder to find.
I'm not trying to say, oh, boo hoo, men have it harder after all. I don't think that kind of comparison accomplishes much.
Nor do I think these factors are an excuse for not putting in the extra effort it takes to cross the gender binary from one direction vs the other. (With apologies to any nonbinary people reading this.)
But "either you can or you can't" seems...weirdly simplistic and discouraging from someone who's done as much as you have to encourage realistic female characters.
Maybe this is a corollary of a larger disagreement between us? It sounds like you also think it should be easy to write characters different from the author along other axes, like race, age, wealth...whereas I also think those are hard and require thought and effort.
From the data given, I believe so but you know the Lit names can be misleading, to put it mildly.Now was the comment from a man or a woman?
Emily
OTOH, "Alien" was written with all the roles gender-blind - though the makers acknowledged they'd assumed Ripley would be male - and I rarely hear people complain that it's not interesting.
Well, it’s a well-known fact that there are no women on Literotica, just guys with gender identifiication issuesFrom the data given, I believe so but you know the Lit names can be misleading, to put it mildly.
She (he?) listed gender: female and age: 41-50. Not an author so no clues there.
How women and men see danger, risk, security, approval, success. That's gendered too.
How women and men see commitment, threat, rivalry, affection, power. So is that.
I will still caution these sorts of attempts to distill differences between men and women.Some key features that most theorists agree upon:
Probably the biggest difference between male and female characters, if you want to be realistic, is going to be in the dialogue. There are a lot of conflicting models (Difference Theory, versus Dominance Theory, vs the Muted Group model, vs the Deficiency Model, depending on whether you subscribe to Tannan, Lakoff, Kramarae, Spender or Cameron on this), but in a nutshell evidence seems to suggest that men and women speak differently.
Some key features that most theorists agree upon:
- women are more likely to hedge (e.g. may, might, could, perhaps)
- women are more likely to use politeness strategies
- women are more likely to use indirect questions (would you mind if..., could I just ask...)
- men are more likely to swear (though this really varies with age)
- men tend to use conversation to compete with one another; women tend to use conversation to cooperate with one another
- therefore, men will be more likely to use exclusive language and women more likely to use inclusive language
- for the same reason, in a neutral setting, women will likely accommodate their register of speech to fit those of the men involved in the conversation
(Naturally, all of the above refers to English speaking countries, and is due to the inherent sexism in those societies. I'm not condoning this at all. But if you want to realistically reflect those societies in your writing, then that's the reality. Of course, if your story is set in a feminist utopia in the hopefully-not-too-far future, then none of the above applies.)
I didn’t say it was easy, nor that it should be easy. My point is no one can do the work for you.
This opening post was really polite and more thoughtful than most of these kind of threads, but still a lot of it boils down to “come, ladies, and do my thinking for me, and in exchange you get to admire how sexy my writing is.” Instead of, dunno, doing the work, reading stories by women and about women and for women, putting some effort into incorporating that into your writing, and then maybe asking “hey guys, did I succeed in this?”
If the underlying assumption is that “as a man I can never imagine what it is to be a woman,” then I don’t understand how “come and explain women to me so that I will understand” would even be possible.
It would be nice if people wrote FMCs who didn’t adhere to these - frankly kinda horrible - societal norms.Probably the biggest difference between male and female characters, if you want to be realistic, is going to be in the dialogue. There are a lot of conflicting models (Difference Theory, versus Dominance Theory, vs the Muted Group model, vs the Deficiency Model, depending on whether you subscribe to Tannan, Lakoff, Kramarae, Spender or Cameron on this), but in a nutshell evidence seems to suggest that men and women speak differently.
Some key features that most theorists agree upon:
- women are more likely to hedge (e.g. may, might, could, perhaps)
- women are more likely to use politeness strategies
- women are more likely to use indirect questions (would you mind if..., could I just ask...)
- men are more likely to swear (though this really varies with age)
- men tend to use conversation to compete with one another; women tend to use conversation to cooperate with one another
- therefore, men will be more likely to use exclusive language and women more likely to use inclusive language
- for the same reason, in a neutral setting, women will likely accommodate their register of speech to fit those of the men involved in the conversation
(Naturally, all of the above refers to English speaking countries, and is due to the inherent sexism in those societies. I'm not condoning this at all. But if you want to realistically reflect those societies in your writing, then that's the reality. Of course, if your story is set in a feminist utopia in the hopefully-not-too-far future, then none of the above applies.)
Thank you for this. I'm definitely trying to do my homework, including reading more "stories by women and about women and for women."