Subject: Rowling
Author:
Posted on: 2010-04-19 15:06:00 UTC
Rowling makes more money than the Queen of England, but of course you're entitled to your own opinion
Subject: Rowling
Author:
Posted on: 2010-04-19 15:06:00 UTC
Rowling makes more money than the Queen of England, but of course you're entitled to your own opinion
Storming the Battlements or: Why the Culture of Mary Sue Shaming is a Bully Culture
It is a very interesting essay and I found it through someone's LJ and I'm wondering what everyone here thinks.
I'm so riled up I wrote 15 pages worth of essay last night at work. Here:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dc42qtdb_2c4rnmrc6
In addition to all the points which have been made, quite validly, by others, you put JRR Tolkien and JK Rowling on the same level! Absolutely unacceptable! Rowling doesn't touch Tolkien, man.
Rowling makes more money than the Queen of England, but of course you're entitled to your own opinion
Money or fame earned from writing is not the same as skill at writing.
Otherwise you'd be putting Meyer and Paolini at the same level, no?
Hell no. At least Paolini uses a tried and true formula for his stories (the Hero's Journey for anyone interested)
However, it seems that half the feminists (like Boosette and her ilk) are whiny victims while the other half are the feminazis that believe women should be superior in every way. Please tell me I'm wrong, but not that I'm a mysoginist because I do want gender equality.
Well, I won't call you a mysoginist, but recognizing only two types of feminst is a grose, grose generalisation.
I just have one question about that: Would you say we think we're better PEOPLE, or that we think we're better WRITERS? (Forgive the caps, please; I can't seem to make HTML formatting work.) I know it might be nitpicking, but I think that's really kind of an important distinction.
However, during the day and a half when my family's internet got cut off due to technical conditions, I was leaning toward the former, as Boosette got under my skin at that time. I'm all right now, though.
It ought to be the latter, certainly. I worry sometimes that some of us lean towards the former.
For me it is the latter, or at least, I know better what makes a good story, not that I can actually write one.
Though, a lot of people who send me complaints about missions seem to think that I think I am a better person. They're quite addament about it.
Not so much better people anymore as just better writers who want to do something about the decay all around us.
As flattered as some people might be at a paean to the Good and Mighty PPC, I for one feel uncomfortable with it. It's one thing to correct someone's ideas about us when you perceive that they're wrong; it's quite another to paint the PPC as some great and noble calling and attempt to...well...defend our honor. Although I see some glimpses of the former, your essay does the latter in abundance. Only someone taking the PPC far too seriously would do that.
We make fun of bad fanfiction with an organization headed by sentient flowers and punctuation. Let's move back toward silliness, shall we?
So you know, thinly veiled insults and extra helpings of cliche don't help make an impressive response.
Was directed more at Boosette than anyone else, but I can certainly remove it.
And yes I may have turned up the prose a bit, but if someone is going to take the PPC seriously I feel we should answer seriously, if only increase the lulz when we drop the bomb that this whole thing is decidedly NOT serious.
I could use some peer review on that. Its 15 pages and probably could be three separate essays if I wanted it to be.
I have, however posted a friends-only rant about this on my LJ, however, which may not agree with what you said, and was composed at a time when I didn't have my feelings in order (yesterday). I'm sorry. Just know that what is written on it was only my private feeling about this matter, and nothing else.
I'm going to keep away from this issue from now on; her opinion isn't important enough to me to spend any more time on it. I don't have trouble sleeping because I've PPCd some badfics, and that's all I really care about.
This whole thing looks like it's headed towards a community flame war. I want no part of it.
But you're right; we need to watch out for that line. "Constant vigilance," as Mad-Eye Moody says.
It seems as though the only way someone can be this blinded to the harms of Mary Sues is if one of her or her friend's characters has been taken down. Do we know if any of her stories has been the subject of a mission? If so, was it a particularly violent assassination? That would most likely create a feeling of dislike, especially if she had connected to the Sue, though this seems like it is rather out of proportion. A Sue team, perhaps?
...who regularly flames Mary Sues, I'm guessing I'm the one she imagines when she talks about the PPC. All of her points seem fairly invalid when she starts by equating Mary Sues with all strong female characters. Because that's just wrong. There's nothing feminist about bad writing, even if it is glorifying women. Mary Sue isn't applied to strong women, just badly written strong women who aren't part of a regular continuity. I write strong female characters all the time. Hell, I love strong women. That's why this pisses me off so much.
And who died and put you in charge of feminism?
Nobody? Your line of questioning is odd. I prefer stories with strong female leads. I read and write stories with strong female leads. I don't think that qualifies me as "in charge of feminism."
As for how strong my women are? They're strong enough to not have their lives revolve around men. Strong enough to solve their own problems. Strong enough to have flaws and work with or around them.
Do you go and tell the writer "BOO YOU SUCK, GO TAKE YOUR SUE AND DIAF"? or do you say "Your Mary Sue sucks because she does *blank*"?
I do MSTs. The authors generally don't find out about them.
That will only lead to tears and confusion.
I just wanted to ask:
Wasn't "Mary Sue" ALWAYS a negative term? I mean, we get the phrase from the famous Star Trek fanfic that MOCKED that kind of character. When was it ever neutral?
On Wikipedia I think it was there's a bit about how for a while people called all self-insert characters "my Mary Sue" but then it became a negative term.
Once again, the author didn't do the research. {= P
~Neshomeh
An expanded version of my already expansive reply can be found here:
http://community.livejournal.com/the_ppc/52523.html
Muahahaha.
I'm strongly tempted to send her the link.
This is a subject that should be responded to. There's no point in composing this long response if we aren't even going to show it to her.
Send her the link. If she chooses not to respond to it, or responds poorly, that's on her. Everyone here seems quick to think that this woman's opinion cannot be changed, when there's always the possibility that it can be - especially with as thorough a rebuttal as was made here.
But perhaps I should phrase myself better: Letting this issue go may not be the right thing to, in terms of high morals and the like, but I think it's probably the wisest thing to if we want to keep everything generally happy around here.
(Of course, if you think you can change my opinion, you're welcome to try to change it, but do bear in mind that I don't want changed, and that's a hard barrier to overcome.)
"All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing."
~ Edmund Burke
Whether anything will come of it, I don't know. But I guess we'll find out soon!
Expanded, hmm? I must go and read it again. :)
As for sending her the link... do it if you like, but I don't expect anything good will come of it. Then again, it's your livejournal; I'm sure you can block her if she gets too nasty. Or her friends do.
Beautifully put, and if you fancy it, I'd heartily approve of posting this and linking the essayist to it.
Something posted at the site where this essay was published, and containing all the counterpoints that had already been posted there (Mary-Sues conform to patriachal ideals more often than not, majority of PPCers are female and empowered, words are taken out of context).
... Ignore my making myself look like an idiot by adding my reply to this little spin-off discussion and not the main one. Is editing possible?
Thanks. I feel validated, now; doubly so because I'd thought of that excuse and discarded it for similar reasons.
I still don't agree with 99% of what the writer of the essay was saying, but I had been thinking along these lines a bit.
I have included comments about annoying Author's Notes in both of the missions I have written. Do you think that that falls under this?
I don't know, but I guess it really depends on the egregiousness. If they're insulting people, I'd say go for it; ditto the infamous Bryan thing. Stuff like emoticons or general attitudes is maybe unnecessary, though, especially since it's an informal area of the thing where those things aren't really inappropriate. In-text notes, I personally would feel free to snap at the placement, but make it clear that the issue was the placement, not the content. Bottom line: Ask "Am I insulting the author's writing/sense of where to put notes or am I insulting the author?" Just my guesses, though.
I commented on it having random information about unrelated stories that had been deleted, and having the same horrible grammar that afflicted the rest of the story.
I didn't go past the fourth chapter, but if I had, I probably would have commented on the fact that the entire fifth chapter was an Author's Note.
After all, we read a story to read the story, not be interrupted by pointless chatter.
When writing my fanfics, there has only been one time that I really, really needed to say something about an event in the story that couldn't be squeezed into narrative or put in the chapter's opening notes (because it would have spoiled things) - so I put it in the end. If she doesn't absolutely need to tell us something at that exact point - not before, not after - then maybe there's a case for it. Otherwise, bah.
That last part probably qualifies, especially if it was on the Pit since that's explicitly against the rules. I might have left the extraneous info alone, but it's hardly my call.
It is my opinion that author's notes have no place inside the story. It's fine if you want to accompany a note along with the link to the story - but putting notes /into/ the story does many bad things, most importantly breaking suspension of disbelief.
They also rarely have anything relevant and interesting to say.
I was talking about ones at the beginning or end of the chapter, or is that what you were referring to? I actually like reading ones that aren't interrupting the story; they're a little like DVD extras, in my opinion.
I really doubt it (that 13-year-olds are the only writers). In fact, it's the minimum age on a lot of sites.
Also, I'm fascinated by the way they all assume we're not teenagers.
And I actually saw that mission, I believe. Miah got glitter poisoning?
Yeah, she got glitter poisoning and made kissy noises at Cali.
If I remember right on July's survey, I was the third oldest person to respond to it, and I'm thirty--which I have to inform all of you teenagers is not nearly as old as it sounds! :p
The average age of the author's of stories I have done missions on is 34.5.
It may not be, if the site is biased towards such essays.
It's LiveJournal, right? They aren't as stringent in their standards as FFN. Some people may not like it, but hey, it'd be an answer.
I believe it's Dreamwidth. Similar, but different. Also, the author is heavily filtering replies to that post, so anything we said there would never see the light of day. Apparently disagreeing with her in her "own safe space" of an internet journal is not allowed.
Of course, if anyone has their own Dreamwidth account and wants to do something, that would work.
~Neshomeh
But we could go around asking if someone on the Board has one. You or one of those that made those lengthy responses to the essay can also make one. What are the requirements? I can't do it myself, as i'm male and the Suethor may use that as a point against us. Stupid reason, I know, but still...
I have one, but am also a male, so...
So, what are the requirements?
For joining Dreamwidth? Don't know. I'm part of scans_daily and they made me a member.
So, what are the requirements?
A Response to Storming the Battlements and a Defence of the Sporking Culture, written by a Genuinely Empowered Female. (I'm thinking Araeph, as her response is already there). Or possibly How Mary Sues are Patriachal Icons, not Feminist ones, by a Female Writer. What do you think?
A part of the feminist movement is being able to do all of those things - wear pretty dresses, get married and take the role of the housewife, etc. - and still be considered equal.
You brought up a point I meant to make, about those characters being okay IN CONTEXT. It's a bit different when you're inserting your "awesome" character into someone else's universe. It's not your house, you don't make the rules; you obey the house rules. That's just common courtesy.
~Neshomeh, surprised by how well that analogy works and that she's never used it before. O.o
You should add that to Neshomeh's article addition - an assumption that just because someone can pick up a pen and form squiggles, they should proudly display said squiggles to the world. Very eloquant. I approve.
And no, we DMSers still look for bad writing first and foremost, but there's really nothing hard about it, because the Sues that make us - me, at least - grit teeth and rip hair out are almost universally coupled with bad writing anyway.
I was mostly referring to grammar and spelling, but either point applies. I probably shouldn't have used the word "universal" - there are pleanty of exceptions.
Characterization and plot are as much a part of good writing and good story-telling as grammar and spelling. As is knowing your facts.
~Neshomeh
... then I would be expecting criticism for it. And at that point, I wouldn't care because it would just be me making something completely ridiculous, and just sharing it's ridiculousness with the world.
Yes, but suethors are not expecting criticism. They are expecting everyone to love their character, just as all the characters in the story they are inserting themselves into love them.. Now, if you were just sharing your own personal story I suppose that's fine, but no human should EXPECT uniform praise when it's plainly obvious for all to see that their character is merely them with the reality and interest ironed out.
It's funny to me that the author of this essay thinks PPC missions are intended as attacks against the Suethors. Most of the mission writers I know of don't even contact the original Suethor to begin with. The essay says writing badfic doesn't hurt anyone; well, neither do PPC missions or other sporkings.
Also, as Neshomeh mentioned already, using another term or phrase in place of "Mary Sue" wouldn't change the badness of the stories they appear in, or any reader's reaction to them. To paraphrase Shakespeare, a rose will always the same flower, no matter what we may call it.
People on this 'Board have called Alanna, from the Lioness Quartet, a Sue, and she's a well-rounded canon character if ever there was one.
I believe that's the Fallacy of Equivocation. I think. Not sure.
Very nice - I thouroughly approve. One thing, though:
You say "there IS such a thing as a well-written Mary-Sue", but I think you should write that as "a well-written character with all the typical characteristics of a Sue" - clumsier, I know, but we call the Department of Bad Slash such because there is such a thing as good slash, but the DMS doesn't get called "The Department of Bad Mary-Sues" because we don't seem to believe there is such as thing as a Good Sue. I realise that's playing right into the hands of the essay-writer, but it'd probably be the safer way to go.
Better to be too detailed and a bit off-topic than leave holes for people like her to rip apart.
...I'd be happy to do that.
Then we will have 4 cents!
~Neshomeh
There can be unnecessary cruelty. I think the goal should be to help people become better writers. Constructive criticism should always be a part of the 'treatment'. It's the author's prerogative to ignore it.
The point about Mary Sues being misogynistic is an insightful one too, though I don't know if it's misogyny as much as it's poor confidence, or delusions of grandeur, or wish-fulfilment. Maybe more accurately they are a *product* of misogyny? The comparison to body self-image is apt.