mrissa: (question)
mrissa ([personal profile] mrissa) wrote2009-10-14 03:27 pm

Question of the day, #1

So I was thinking about the recent rants from "oh noes, girl cooties in my SF" people. I was thinking about which traits of mine are most crucial to my reading experience when reflected in characters. I do not, for example, find it particularly difficult to care about male characters, or non-white characters, or homosexual characters. But I was pretty sure that if I thought about it, I would come up with some things where I really did want characters to be "like me."

What I came up with is loyalty.

I don't require a character with whom I can identify; caring is enough. But when a character is blithely disloyal to people who are showing them loyalty, I have a hard time not putting down the book and walking away.

How about you? What traits do you want to share--or at least not blatantly not share--with a character in order to care about their story?

[identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com 2009-10-14 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I think mostly the other side is the one debating stereotypes here, and our side is sort of snickering and shaking our heads. But yes, anyone who tried to coopt you as "middle-aged straight white male reader of Heinlein and Doc Smith, must be on our side against girl cooties" would have a pretty nasty shock.

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2009-10-14 09:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, yes, it's definitely their concept, not ours. Sorry I didn't make that clear enough.