Date: 17 October 2007 04:59 pm (UTC)
I haven't read the novel in question but now I will if only to judge its "girly-ness" for myself.

Judging not only from that thread but others in that forum, I can only come to the conclusion that there's a significant number of people who think female authors are inherently inferior (in quality of writing) to male authors and that female fantasy authors don't write "real" fantasy. The implication is that real fantasy is by and for men. It doesn't even make me angry anymore, just tired.

Anyway, I agree that "chick lit" refers to a very specific genre and to extend the term to anything that has romance and "emo moments" renders the phrase meaningless. And it is a derogatory term. It certainly carries a dismissive conotation.

I'm also still curious about which elements are associated with specific genders and why.

I've read more books written by women than by men, especially in the fantasy genre. It's not a conscious decision on my part; unless it's an author I've already read, I don't look at the name on the cover when I pick up a book. Books that are character-driven rather than plot-driven appeal to me more, and it just happens that female writers tend to focus on characters more than male writers (or so it seems).


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