Subject: Which is sort of a problem.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-07-24 09:26:00 UTC

Picture the following scenario:

Lacksidacksical (posting to the Board): Well, I define a 'Mary-Sue' as any powerful female character, whether they're well-written or not.

[You wait; time passes]

Oaken Thorinshield (posting to a different thread): Mary-Sues? Bah, I hate 'em, one and all. Not a single redeeming feature to their entire species.

Suesette (a random outsider): Wutuf?!

Suesette (posting to a blog): The Protectors of the Plot Continuum is an internet hate-group who despise powerful female characters; in their rampant mysogyny, they declare that there is 'not a single redeeming feature' in any portrayal of a woman who is not passive and weak...

The PPC: Wutuf?!

Obviously (I hope obviously) people can use the term however they choose elsewhere on the internet. But in the PPC - in our stories and in our discussions - it's a technical term. And a technical term really should have a single definition.

Given that we have a 'Department of Mary-Sues', and given that we have been declaring literally since the third line of the first story that 'Mary-Sues are bad' (with no qualifications), I fervently believe that definition should include 'badly-written'.

hS

PS: Lacksidacksical and Oaken Thorinshield are two of my Generic Boarders. They are not intended to represent anyone in particular. Oaken Thorinshield has an agent named Morrigan, which is irrelevant but awesome. ~hS

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