Verdad
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2006
- Posts
- 1,430
But-- do both genders really enjoy both? Trash is trash, for sure. But the original article claims that female authors are rarely even considered to be 'good stuff' in the first place. Even when they are, "good stuff" means "like a man would see it."
That's the article's opinion. What do you think-- is that something you see happening in our society? I agree with you, it shouldn't happen. I try not to do it, personally. But I have read plenty of Notable Critic types who hurl nasturtiums at female writers for being female.
I remember a thread about V.S. Naipaul’s little trolling episode, but I’m not aware of critics habitually putting down women writers. His statement was ridiculous because it was ridiculous, not because it’s some kind of tacitly accepted orthodoxy.
I am aware of our entire culture being tilted in favor of male perspective. If you want to say that even when you compare trash to trash, the stereotypically male-oriented kind gets more respect than the stereotypically female-oriented kind, I’ll agree. Likewise if you point out that in many types of fiction a female protagonist is a publishing and selling liability.
But the original article isn’t talking about female protagonists or about topics that strongly cater to traditionally female interests. It’s talking about women writers, and in order to make its bogus claims, it ignores all women who’ve done well in mainstream lit, all women who’ve done well in formerly male-dominated genres, even all women who’ve written a male protagonist. It accepts as women writers only romance writers and chick lit writers, then it proceeds to be outraged that they’re called fluff.
Really, I’ve no doubt there are publishing and marketing iniquities it would be interesting to know, but the article hasn’t taken time to research and present any. All it does is moan because the world isn’t sufficiently impressed with the likes of Meyer or James, and in the process it creates an impression that all women writers share their interests and levels of competence.