NotWise
Desert Rat
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2015
- Posts
- 15,795
I love the comment.
I think thereās some room for non-sex dialogue and plot elements built around a female supporting character; it is after all LITerotica. Some readers are (or at least, I am) looking for a bit more than the equivalent of a PornHub teaser video.
Almost all of my stories have some plot element other than sex. Some of them have too much plot for many readers.
I actually listed out my stories and marked them for whether I thought they would pass or fail the three rules:
More than one woman in the story,
The women actually have a conversation,
The conversation is not about the male character and/or sex.
I think it illustrates a problem trying to apply the rules to literature.
If I'm very strict about it, no more than nine of the 27 stories even have a chance of passing. The other 18 stories are all written either in first person from a male point of view, or third person limited, mostly from a male point of view. With the man always present, there's never a conversation strictly between two women. Even some of the nine that are written from a female POV may fail because there's no significant conversation with another woman.
If I give the rules a looser interpretation, then I have a 14/13 split with the majority passing, but in a lot of cases the conversation that gives the story a pass is not a conversation between two women, but a conversation between one woman and a couple. In Oscar's Place Trish relates her life story over a table to both Emily and Nick. Watch Me is almost entirely about Rae and Penny, but told from Chad's point of view. The women never have dialogue that is strictly between them. Even in the final scene, which is almost entirely between Penny and Rae, Chad is intimately involved.
With a still-looser interpretation I can get a 17/10 split with the majority passing, but that's because I either loosen conditions for when a conversation is about the man (or sex), or because I let short conversations with secondary characters qualify.
I like the Bechdel test as a litmus test, but that's as far as I can take it.
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