Subject: Re: High-Fives
Author:
Posted on: 2012-08-23 21:52:00 UTC

Yeah, that and the sixties, seventies and eighties models of fantasy and sci-fi contribute to it as well. (In my experience, fantasy and sci-fi original female characters get stuck with "mary sue" a lot more than characters in, say, a mystery story or a period romance.)

Now, I've seen female characters being called Mary Sues for being competent (even at things which it makes good sense that they'd be competent at, given their age, training and environment: for example, being a good shot with a laser rifle, which is difficult, but doesn't require brute strength the way a seven-foot longbow does,) as well as for being incompetent and then having to be rescued. Usually what annoys me is the girls that can take the big bad without batting an eyelash and then bust up when their boyfriend of three months leaves them, but that's just inconsistent characterization and plot warping at it's finest.

Ah, sage advice on the internet. People's prejudices reveal more about them than their actual words.

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