Subject: Re: Elizabeth and Susan
Author:
Posted on: 2014-03-26 23:29:00 UTC

Yeah, dialogue in P&P looses a lot of relevance if you're not terribly used to classic British humor, or if you have trouble with the vocabulary or imagining the tone in which things were said.

Susan, upon a second reading, was probably placed into the "Unlikable" category due to the fact that she took on a leadership role in the early books (and there was a boy available to take on a leadership role instead, though Peter was far less emotionally ready for it than she was,) and because she was later derided for her "lipstick and nylons." I don't think it was intentional, but Lewis may have been demonstrating a contempt for "fashionable" young women of the fifties, or for a young woman choosing to focus for a bit on her appearance or the approval of peers. (Or it could just be Lucy being angry that Susan had seemingly abandoned them all and Narnia... according to the timeline, when all the Pevensies but Susan died, Lucy was seventeen, Edmund was 19, Susan was 21, and Peter was 22.)

I think the author here's problem in writing the essay is one of vocabulary: I took it to mean that she's agitating for more female characters in roles that aren't traditionally feminine, and highlighting that "feminine" roles are traditionally self-effacing, and that women are expected to more or less completely deny their ego in order to be considered adults. (Men rarely are.)

Nonetheless, a very good point is made, that male characters are rarely held to be unreasonable if they act on anger, jealousy, fear, or just plain crabbiness, and female characters are often derided if they act on these emotions, are flawed in any way or if their behavior is assertive... while they're at the same time derided if they cry, display any sort of fear, or react in a human manner. Society expects women and female characters to be a perfect blank slate that reflects whatever men want to read into them, and then goes on to mock many female characters (if written by a female writer,) for being "mary sues," (often with very little justification: while there are plenty of awful popular novels out there, there's also plenty of average to good writing to find,) regardless of whether or not she fits that paradigm of demure incorruptible pure pureness, and to praise male writers if they even think to include a female protagonist, no matter how unrealistic she is.*

* Examples of that are far too many to list, but are the main reason why I couldn't get very far in the Honor Harrington series or A Song of Ice and Fire (besides rape as a plot device): female authors who write characters like Honor get lambasted for daring to write a female starship captain, while Weber gets nothing but praise for writing his blue-eyed military-jacket dream girl in every series, and Martin spent the entire chapter I read having the female character he was writing think about her boobs. In my humble opinion, the majority of Martin's fame is due to the TV series and not due to the quality of his writing: he can't write a female character naturally because he's constantly reminding the reader that they have boobs.

Reply Return to messages