a_white_rain: (itty ishtars)
a_white_rain ([personal profile] a_white_rain) wrote2011-12-25 11:34 am

(no subject)

WHO IS GOING TO BE CHECKING OUT SAILOR MOON FROM THE LIBRARY? THAT'S RIGHT ME. I WILL BE ABLE TO TOUCH THE MANGA AND NOT HAVE TO SQUINT BY READING IT ILLEGALLY OVER THE INTERNNETS.

ALSO. I SHIP MORGAN/GARCIA AND STUFF BUT UNTIL SHE DUMPS XANDER-WHO-IS-CUTE-IN-THIS HE SHOULD MAKE OUT WITH REID. THEIR FIRST DATE SHOULD INCLUDE BUYING JELLO.

[personal profile] ellenel13 2011-12-25 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember I could never get into Sailor Moon because I was always HOW CAN THEY NOT SEE WHO THIS IS? HOW IS THIS A SECRET IDENTITY? HER HEROIC OUTFIT IS JUST HER UNIFORM BUT SHORTER. WHAT IS THIS?

[personal profile] ellenel13 2011-12-25 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
lol maybe.

anyway happy holidays <-- WAR ON CHRISTMAS

[personal profile] ellenel13 2011-12-25 08:47 pm (UTC)(link)
by the way, i finally got my hands in the song of ice and fire series and i think you might enjoy it if you can get your hands in it

even though it's been written by a dude, there are several girl characters (catelyn, cersei, sansa, arya, brienne, daenerys, ygritte, lysa, shae, more i can't think off the top of my head this series has a million characters)

best of all, these women are important for reasons beyond being one of the heroes' girlfriend/wife/mother/sister/friend

[personal profile] ellenel13 2011-12-25 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
i'm up to the third book, and nothing overly graphic has happened. And not to the main characters. Plus when it does happen it's pretty clear from the narrative that the author is portraying it as a horrifying war crime. And several of the women characters have gotten to voice their anger and pain at how much they're devalued in a patriarchal society.

It's far from perfect, but my personal litmus test about this issue is to look at the male heroes. So far, none of them have raped any women under the excuse that "it's set in the middle ages, it was okay back then" that a lot of fantasy writers seem to use. As a matter of fact, they display an amount of respect for women that I'd consider unrealistic for most men born in this century. More importantly, none of them have engaged in much passive misogyny and when they do, the women around them call them out on it and are backed up by the narrative.

I'm not in George RR Martin's head, but I honestly think that he's trying to explicitly show that misogyny is a bad thing in these books. It's far from perfect, but much better than what I usually find in fantasy written by men (and some women, sadly).

Now that I recce'd him on the grounds of not being super-faily in regards to women's issues, watch me find an interview in which he brings out the fail.

[personal profile] ellenel13 2011-12-25 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Perfectly understandable. If you ever do feel in better frame of my in regards to potential triggers, I think it's worth a shot.