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Karen Gillan: Moffat's Writing Not Sexist |
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#76 |
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I don't think a writer would be excluded from falling into lazy tropes or cliches in the way they present female characters just because they are a gay male. It will of course mean there is a difference in perspective but they could just as easily slip into cliche or stereotype. I think RTD has done. And I think many female writers are guilty of the same. And gay writers. Where for instance does one even start with a show like Sex and the City?
I think there is a debate to be had and always will be about gender and sexuality and race and class when it comes to drama and how its written. I just find it baffling that Moffat seems to have become the poster boy for sexist writing among some sections of fandom. I don't think it's baffling that people have raised the issue of sexism in Moffat's writing but I do find it baffling that it has become some sort of political thing. |
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#77 |
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It isn't evidence of the male gaze. The male gaze is sexual; the writer writes female characters as his sexual fantasies. Obviously with TV and film, there are other people involved in the male gaze. The male gaze is about perception and presentation rather than plot points.
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#78 |
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Gay male writers wouldn't at all be excluded from lazy tropes or cliches but it would be a question of bad or lazy writing rather than the 'male gaze'. The 'male gaze' is that element of sexual fantasy that outweighs the writer's critical judgement. The idea of being able to write their perfect woman and their ideas of what a woman should be outweighs the desire to create a complex flawed character.
I don't think it's baffling that people have raised the issue of sexism in Moffat's writing but I do find it baffling that it has become some sort of political thing. |
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#79 |
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Is this scene on youtube?
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#80 |
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i mean I find it odd that its just Moffat who seems to get this tag. It seems unfair.
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#81 |
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Actually it's nothing to do with Rory being flat and more with him being a cypher for The Nice Guy TM. He is that trope down to a tee. He's the 'she always goes for the horrible men but never notices me even though I really deserve her' guy. I don't like to see that because it comes with a massive sense of male entitlement - the girl should like him because he's nice. He deserves her because he's 'nice'. That's all kinds of problematic. No where was this worse displayed in the whole mess with Amy leaving him. Her pain at being unable to have children wasn't about her, it was all about him. It was the 'I love you more because I'm so nice and put upon' nonsense which she just blithely accepts. I think Rory is more harmful to Amy as a character than her relationship with the Doctor ever was and, tbh, I think Rory exhibits more of the problematic elements of male gaze than the title character does as well.
But I don't think the fact that a fictional relationship is the work of a straight make writer means such relationships don't exist outside of fiction. I've met a lot of couples a bit like Amy and Rory, where the guy is very nice and devoted, while the girl is abrasive and outgoing, and all of them were long-term relationships, two of them are now married. I've also met couples like Mickey and Rose which, like on the show, didn't work out. |
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#82 |
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I don't think that's entirely fair. When me meet Amy and Rory for the first time they are together, and then for most of Series 5 they are about to get married
I see it less as Rory having a male entitlement as Amy living a stereotypical female fantasy. |
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#83 |
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I think all that needs to be said on this matter is FFS.
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#84 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWU6XL9xI4k&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Phew, that was really touching!
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#85 |
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I think all that needs to be said on this matter is FFS.
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#86 |
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I agree - I'd go so far as to say that Rory was just fine being himself. It was Amy who was obsessed with what she saw as a romantic ideal. She spent her life trying to get him to live up to her perfect man. And then that perfect man turns up and whisks her away on her wedding night.
I see it less as Rory having a male entitlement as Amy living a stereotypical female fantasy. |
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#87 |
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The thing is... Rory was very popular with the female audience in exactly the way he was intended to be: as a cliche of a female fantasy. Clearly, this 'deserving guy' trope gets as much sympathy from the female audience as it does from the male audience, because it has been proven to play very well to them. Of course, all people, women and men, would like to have someone adore them and be devoted to them and they want to be that special 'one'. Of course, everyone would like the self esteem boost of the fantasy that they are so wonderful that in themselves they are the 'reward' for such a dedicated person. Many women like that idea, and so do men, although culturally they're more excluded from confessing to it. Wouldn't it be great to be so wonderful that you didn't need to do anything more to reward kindness or affection from people than simply existing? The power it gives you... It's almost... arousing.
![]() Personally, I'm male, and I found Rory's 'deserving' attributes one of the unappealing traits of the character. I'm sure lots of other men felt similarly. So we shouldn't be giving these blanket 'men like this', 'women like that' statements anyway. You can say Moffat is sexist, or you can say he's observant, in the same way innumerable female authors of so-called 'chick-lit' romantic fiction are, who fill the books with unrealistic male portrayals designed to be sexually / romantically appealing to women (successfully, as their sales show). And of course, populist male authors do the same with female characters. You have to be very naive to think that a female author would do anything more than push the 'sexism' back the other way. Or be one-eyed and selective enough to not acknowledge that. I think the point here is that if you want to have an agenda, there will always be fuel as long as you are selective enough. If Doctor Who is 'sexist', and no doubt by some definitions it is, then it is no more so than the rest of our general culture. What many are baffled by is why Moffat is singled out for it by some people. I'm not baffled by it because I understand the reason: said people don't like him, and so will selectively choose whatever justifications they can find for it. Amy Pond is a sexist sterotype, to some degree. Rory Pond is a sexist stereotype, to some degree. This is the world, not the specific world of Doctor Who or Steven Moffat. |
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#88 |
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The thing is... Rory was very popular with the female audience in exactly the way he was intended to be: as a cliche of a female fantasy. Clearly, this 'deserving guy' trope gets as much sympathy from the female audience as it does from the male audience, because it has been proven to play very well to them. Of course, all people, women and men, would like to have someone adore them and be devoted to them and they want to be that special 'one'. Of course, everyone would like the self esteem boost of the fantasy that they are so wonderful that in themselves they are the 'reward' for such a dedicated person. Many women like that idea, and so do men, although culturally they're more excluded from confessing to it. Wouldn't it be great to be so wonderful that you didn't need to do anything more to reward kindness or affection from people than simply existing? The power it gives you... It's almost... arousing.
![]() Personally, I'm male, and I found Rory's 'deserving' attributes one of the unappealing traits of the character. I'm sure lots of other men felt similarly. So we shouldn't be giving these blanket 'men like this', 'women like that' statements anyway. You can say Moffat is sexist, or you can say he's observant, in the same way innumerable female authors of so-called 'chick-lit' romantic fiction are, who fill the books with unrealistic male portrayals designed to be sexually / romantically appealing to women (successfully, as their sales show). And of course, populist male authors do the same with women. You have to be very naive to think that a female author would do anything more than push the 'sexism' back the other way. Or be one-eyed and selective enough to not acknowledge that. I think the point here is that if you want to have an agenda, there will always be fuel as long as you are selective enough. If Doctor Who is 'sexist', and no doubt by some definitions it is, then it is no more so than the rest of our general culture. What many are baffled by is why Moffat is singled out for it by some people. I'm not baffled by it because I understand the reason: said people don't like him, and so will selectively choose whatever justifications they can find for it. Amy Pond is a sexist sterotype, to some degree. Rory Pond is a sexist stereotype, to some degree. This is the world, not the specific world of Doctor Who or Steven Moffat. |
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#89 |
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The way i see it, sexism has nothing to do with fantasy men/women, the male gaze or the female gaze.
Sexism is about discrimination based on gender or promoting the stereotyping of social roles based on gender. If you consider a woman to be less capable, less deserving or her opinion less worthy of respect than a male simply because she's a woman then you're being sexist. If you promote the idea that women should not aspire to roles traditionally considered to be the province of males (or vice-versa) then you're being sexist. Portraying female companions as smart, sexy, capable and independent (or even fiesty) does not qualify for that definition in any way. Maybe if Moffat were to make all his female companions meek, subservient types who spent all their time in the kitchen doing the Doctor's housework and welcoming him back from his adventures with a hot cup of tea and a backrub, people might have a point, but I've yet to see it! |
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#90 |
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Both RTD and Moffat are not perfect writers.
Neither of them are sexist though. |
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#91 |
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Portraying female companions as smart, sexy, capable and independent (or even fiesty) does not qualify for that definition in any way. Maybe if Moffat were to make all his female companions meek, subservient types who spent all their time in the kitchen doing the Doctor's housework and welcoming him back from his adventures with a hot cup of tea and a backrub, people might have a point, but I've yet to see it!
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#92 |
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I think the accusation is that Moffat writes all women as being pushy, screechy, sex objects, which is a whole different set of stereotypes.
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#93 |
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I think if people look at Clara and Amy and see pushy, screechy sex objects then maybe they're the ones with the problem
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#94 |
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Can't believe nobody's made a 'male gaze'/'male gays' joke yet.
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#95 |
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I think if people look at Clara and Amy and see pushy, screechy sex objects then maybe they're the ones with the problem
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#96 |
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Perhaps screechy isn't the best word. Mouthy, perhaps. You can't deny, there is a certain theme. Women who boss the Doctor around while flirting outrageously with him and having mysterious pasts.
Besides, that sort of companion is my favourite sort of companion, so if people insist on calling it sexist then I say lets have more sexism because it's all good to me
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#97 |
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Can't believe nobody's made a 'male gaze'/'male gays' joke yet.
Ah.
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#98 |
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Amy Pond is a sexist sterotype, to some degree. Rory Pond is a sexist stereotype, to some degree. This is the world, not the specific world of Doctor Who or Steven Moffat.
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#99 |
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Sexism is about discrimination based on gender or promoting the stereotyping of social roles based on gender.
If you consider a woman to be less capable, less deserving or her opinion less worthy of respect than a male simply because she's a woman then you're being sexist. If you promote the idea that women should not aspire to roles traditionally considered to be the province of males (or vice-versa) then you're being sexist. Fiction is built on stereotypes, or more specifically, tropes. It thrives off them. But with well-written characters, you don't notice, or if you do notice, you don't care. Quote:
Portraying female companions as smart, sexy, capable and independent (or even fiesty) does not qualify for that definition in any way.
It comes under female stereotypes, particularly the idea that a woman must either be a wet blanket or a sassy wench. The latter will always find some man to take pity on them but really his eye will be wandering after the wench, who's too much for men to handle. Women, as people, are a mix of strengths and flaws. Flaws are what makes people people. Without flaws, you're an object, a fantasy. That is why some women object to the 'sassy wench' stereotype and it's even more objectionable when men imply that they should be grateful that they're not being portrayed as some mousy little wifey. That's not a snidey insult at you- lots of men do it, perhaps without realising. It's like if a woman watched Rory's character and said "Well, at least he isn't playing a hairy wifebeater". It's an exchange of stereotypes.Also, over-sexualising female characters and emasculating the male ones is a bit sexist. People have said that Moffat's supposed 'type of woman' is obvious from the three central women supposedly having the same qualities. It doesn't help that on the surface the men emphatically don't have these qualities or at least not to the strength of the females. Why can't everyone be sexy?
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#100 |
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Not to mention Molly and Mary in Sherlock. Basically if Moffat writes a female character that doesn't fit the impossibly narrow template of what these complainers consider acceptable (and it is very narrow) then he will get criticised.
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