mysticalchild_isis: (xena rawr)
[personal profile] mysticalchild_isis
Further Thoughts On Fandom Misogyny

You know, I'm disturbed by how often the male characters who treat people (especially women) like crap are the fandom darlings. They become the woobie who can do no wrong, because he's deep, he has layers, he's had bad things happen to him, he's misunderstood (especially by all those evil female characters). They often have huge communities devoted to them and metric tons of fic describing how wonderful and perfect they are. I'm not trying to criticize people for loving the characters they love. We all have our preferences, and deeply complex characters are interesting, and often feel more real.

What's really bothering me here are the gender politics that go on in fandom, and the double standard between the way female characters are treated versus male characters.

Let's take Tony DiNozzo from NCIS. Yes, I like him too. He is a complex character, he's had some wonderful moments of heroism, and he has struggled with some tough times in his life. But let's be honest: he's rude, he's dismissive, he bullies people, he objectifies women constantly, and he also tends to blame women ("it's always the wife "). Before anyone jumps in to accuse me of misunderstanding poor Tony, let's take a step back and deconstruct things a bit.

Take some time and really, truly, and honestly think about this: if Tony was instead a woman, let's say Tonia, what would you think about her? When she constantly objectified men while simultaneously dismissing and blaming them, how would you feel? When she bullied, belittled, and tormented Tim, would it seem just as funny (because, after all, she really does love Tim like a brother, right)?

There are some people who can truthfully say they'd love Tonia just as much as Tony, because it really is just about what they like about the characterization, regardless of gender. Tonia has probably also gained some brand new fans, who like her because she turns the dominant paradigm on its head- they'd enjoy watching a woman constantly objectifying men, and running roughshod over everyone.

But be honest: how many people would call Tonia a slut, a bitch, a whore, or a harpy? How dare that uppity woman torment poor little Timmy! Who does she think she is?

Let's try an opposite sort of example, and take Rose Tyler from Doctor Who. Rose consistently gets accused of being a Mary Sue, a selfish brat, a chav, and all sorts of other similarly offensive things. Imagine, however (honestly and deeply), if Rose was instead Ryan, played by someone like Bradley James. Let's say we now have a young man who doesn't have much in the way of education, but who pick things up pretty quickly, someone who's compassionate and friendly, and who loves the Doctor deeply. Ryan is suddenly reminding me a lot of a modern version of Jamie McCrimmon. How many people hate on Jamie, or call him a Gary Stu, or accuse him of being selfish for loving the Doctor? Just how many of the people who despise Rose would hate Ryan just as much?

Try taking any female character you dislike, and transforming them into a man... how does this change how you look at them? There are still going to be plenty of characters you dislike, regardless of gender, because they're still a cat hater, or a Yankees fan, or they look just like that math teacher who used to call you stupid. But how much time would you spend bashing them? Do you think there would be whole communities devoted to hating them? Would they be constantly vilified in fanfic?

But what does it matter if we bash female characters? They're only fictional, after all. I'll just say this- I don't think it's a good idea to spend a lot of time disparaging and despising women, even if they aren't real, as that's the sort of thing that can become a habit.

Yes, I'm oversimplifying things, being judgmental, and the people who see this are almost certainly the last people on earth who need to read it, but I had to throw it out there.

Thoughts, critiques, attacks, opinions?

You're very welcome to share this/link to it.

Date: 2010-03-29 12:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eyra.livejournal.com
I've met only a few folks who ship Gibbs/DiNozzo that don't show complete and utter hatred to the female characters (other than Abby.)

This really depresses me. I just...thought I'd stand up and be counted, since there are apparently so few of us. I am someone who ships Gibbs/Dinozzo (though not exclusively, and not particularly rabidly), but who also really really loves Ziva, and I really liked Kate (I might have loved her, except that I watched the first two seasons after having watched Kill Ari, so I tried really hard not to get too attached. Not that it worked out all that well; I still cried when I got to Kill Ari again). I also think I'm one of the few people who really liked Jen. I found her interesting and likable, and the ambivalence that entered her characterization when it became obvious that she was basically using a federal agency for a personal vendetta didn't make me hate her, it made me like her more.

But Ziva's my favorite. The reason I don't want Tiva is because I think she deserves better. But I would be all over Tony/Ziva if it were, you know...written differently. If I didn't feel like Ziva became somehow lessened when the show were trying to throw them together*, because yeah, Tony can be a dick, but she doesn't have to put up with it. She doesn't put up with his crap when the subtext isn't romantic.

*I winced when I wrote that. I mean, women should be allowed to be vulnerable without becoming "less," you know? But that's how it feels to me, though I can't tell if that's the show's problem (actually lessening her) or mine (interpreting romantic subplots as lessening, which is something I hate when other people do). But I kept it in there because I felt like, even if it is my problem it has to be the show's, too, to some degree. I mean, extra-textually, look at the way Ziva reacted to Jeanne (with pining for Tony) versus the way Tony reacted to Michael (with suspicions, and he turned out to be right).

Date: 2010-03-29 12:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madelynnm.livejournal.com
All I can say is, I think I love you.


I like the idea of Tony/Ziva *in theory* as I've pointed out. But logically, I can't make sense of it. I wouldn't mind seeing it on the show but I'd also rather not because I like my Tony better as well.

Date: 2010-03-29 12:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madelynnm.livejournal.com
and I hope I didn't come off rude, even though I made a relatively large assumption about a faction of shippers, but I think you got my point?

Date: 2010-03-29 12:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eyra.livejournal.com
Oh, not rude at all! It was depressing, and I hadn't ever thought of it that way before, but it wasn't actually surprising, either. I mean, there's a lot of Gibbs/Dinozzo love and a lot of Ziva hate, and I'd never really thought before about the fact that this means there's probably crossover there.

I think I actually would mind seeing Tony/Ziva on the show, just because I think they'd butcher my love for the idea of it. With you, I'm a lot more fond of the Tony in my head than the one I see on the show.

Date: 2010-03-30 11:26 pm (UTC)
ext_18106: (Chiana and a bit of angst)
From: [identity profile] lyssie.livejournal.com
Your Ziva paragraph: THIS. And the thing is, yes, she can become vulnerable, but the way the writers are going about it is to... do so in an entirely obnoxious way: making her just another emotional woman who loses all her arguments with Tony.

It's not something I blame on Ziva, it's the writers (they're very uneven in their treatment of characters).

And I'm also one of the people who loved Jenny.

Profile

mysticalchild_isis: (Default)
Isis/Sarah/Bowie

January 2016

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
1011 1213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 11th, 2025 01:58 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios