Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2011

Portrayals of Feminine Skills and Attibutes as Sources of Strengh and Power

"Similarly, the Kyoshi Warriors have a fighting style that turns feminine accessories like fans into key weapons in their arsenal. When Sokka meets them, he has to be more feminine, rather than less, to become a more skilled fighter. If we had more portrayals of traditionally feminine skills and attributes as sources of strength and power, I think showing women as strong when they take on traditionally male attributes or roles wouldn’t feel like lazy shorthand and instead could be part of a Balanced Action Diet. We need Michelle Yeohs, Sigourney Weavers, and Hit-Girls along with our Angelinas." via ThinkProgress by Alyssa Rosenberg on 9/7/11

 I am going to use this quote as a jumping off point for my blog post today. One of the comments at the Geek Girl Con that I attended this past weekend was basically this point.


Lazy shorthand of creating a strong female character from this article seems to be the tough strong woman such as Ripley (Alien), Sarah Conner (The Terminator; The Sarah Conner Chronicles), and Starbuck (Battlestar Galactica). These are traditional the examples of a strong female character. And they are strong. And they are awesome. But what do they all have in common? They all subscribe to a patriarchal view of strength--physical prowess, tough attitude, and militaristic influences.

On a message board for the Fable II Xbox game, one poster asked, "Can I have a Female With Max strength stats without her being all bulky and stuff?"


I think the question should be, what makes a strong female character. And that the one of the better answers would be one that follows a more feminine strength, like the Kyoshi Warriors and the Japanese war fan weapons they use. 

To take it further one could say a female strength can come from even more traditionally feminine characteristics. What would these be?


Or you could go in another direction and define a strong woman as one who was strong, but not necessarily male or female. Then you would move into androgyny. How would this be defined?