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[personal profile] salinea
There's a whole discussion that happened last week on Ran's Board which my friends from there most probably know all about, but about which I'd be curious to have some other opinions. (BTW, I use the nickname "Stranger" in those forums).

It all started with a post about Kushner's novel Priviledge of the Sword started by Pat, who beyond his activity on that forum also manages a Fantasy blog, which I think has a pretty good reputation.

Anyway, one of the thing that caught my eye was that Pat, among other things, called Priviledge of the Sword "chick lit through and through". Other people gave good or bad opinions about that novel or Kushner's novels generally speaking. Ran, notably, denied that it was Chick Lit, whereas Calibandar called it "the girliest books I've laid my hands on in recent years".

Discussions about the "male-ness" or the "girly-ness" of specific books is something I have seen often, and which I may have sometimes made use of myself, even though I don't like it, to refer to some hard-to-define aesthetics. So I started a thread about that subject, using Pat's thread as an example, in which I asked a lot of questions to people : Chick Lit, What is it? Why isn't there any Boy's Lit?

I had two agendas with this thread : pointing out the sexism in calling some books Chick Lit in order to dismiss their quality, and questionning which specific images and idiosyncracies were associated with which gender and why. The thread saw much more discussions about the first point, both in agreement and disagreement, although some people did good effort to answer my second point as well. The discussion grew in some points somewhat heated and even wanky, but wasn't uninteresting.

A certain amount of people did agree that "Chick Lit" described a specific genre of book about female protagonists in urban, modern setting with an irreverant tone and some sexual situations, that such a genre had nothing to do with Kushner's writing. Some people also agreed that Chick Lit wasn't a good name for such a genre because it described what kind of market the genre is aimed at instead of the content of the books; and because it can cause confusion about other books, like Kushner's. Although lots of people still disagreed about that, so I'd hardly call it a consensus.

Last part of this little debate, Pat's eventually posted his final review of Priviledge of the Sword at his blog yesterday. Unsurprizingly, he was still mostly negative about it, but also persisted in calling it "Fantasy chick lit" and "one of the 'girliest' novels [he's] ever read", moreover he extrapolated this description by saying :

"There's a very "girly" approach to the narrative. It focuses on undying/forbidden love, corny romance, flowers, jewelry, gowns, fabrics, and an inordinate amount of emo moments. For crying out loud, the characters shed more tears in this book than bridesmaids at a wedding! There is only so much crying one can take, after all. In addition, the emo male characters are not authentic."

You'd think he was talking about about badfanfics ^^ I'm not entirely surprised by this reading because earlier at Ran's Board, I'd seen ErrantBard, who appeared quite sane otherwise, say about Swordspoint :

what I would say classify it as "chick-lit" in my mind is, from memory:
  • Flowers and effeminate looking men with open shirts on the cover, first
  • Prominence of homosexuality in the relationships
  • Pure love
  • Invincible yet sensible, fragile, honourable hero.
  • Insufferable whiny useless support characters you're supposed to pity rather than wish dead, for some reason
  • A plot revolving around the feelings some people have for each other.


  • A number of which terms had me raise my eyebrow in regard of Swordspoint. But hey! People read books are see different things in it. It happens.

    It makes sense that a certain lack of sensitivity about specific genres that one doesn't like mean that one blurs the distinction between those genres. Thus romance, mannerpunk, and Chich Lit elements are all confused and equally dismissed as if they were equivalent although to anyone looking into those seriously it's obvious they're very far from being the same. The fact that all these different elements are, for some reason, associated with female taste and female writing is of course what makes such confusion problematic and sexist.

    The thing that really makes me angry there is that several people as well as Pat have defended their use of the term by saying "what is so bad about works written by women that cater to what women want to read?" even though they're very obviously using the word "Chick Lit" or "girly" to dismiss and criticize a specific type of writing : "corny romance", "inordinate amount of emo moments", "the emo male characters are not authentic."
    That's not the description of a genre of writing that one doesn't like but that's still considered as legit. That's a description of bad writing, through and through. A bad writing that is typified as female.

    Now, while I'm still infuriated about the structural sexism of such use of terms, I'm also still curious about which elements are associated with specific genders and why.

    Date: 17 October 2007 12:09 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] after-nightfall.livejournal.com
    But is that sort of lazy thinking influenced by cultural stereotypes? Is it inferior because it's for women, or is it that "it must be" for women because it's inferior, and obviously no man would want to read something like that? Or is it both, and a constantly self-reinforcing circle, like a positive feedback loop?

    Maybe I'd better go and reread it.

    Date: 17 October 2007 01:26 pm (UTC)
    ext_2023: (Default)
    From: [identity profile] etrangere.livejournal.com
    I'm betting on the feedback loop.

    Date: 17 October 2007 01:59 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rockstarwookie.livejournal.com
    I cant say for sure if it's influenced by cultural stereotypes, not really having a proper knowledge of the whole thing, but the cultural stereotype seems likely from my vantage point.

    When I first saw that thread last week or the week before, the only parallel that jumped to my mind was when people dismiss a work as being only read by "teenage boys in their bedrooms". Thing is, my experience is that it's Fantasy that's dismissed this way, and well, that doesn't really hold a whole lot of water on a board dedicated to a Fantasy series in a discussion involving a whole load of female fans of Fantasy :)

    I didn't mention the "teenage boys" thing in the thread, because I was afraid that it was too much of a Red Herring, and I'm still not sure that it isn't. After all, the "girly" accusation is clearly to do with gender, where as "teenage boys in their bedrooms" refers to both gender and immaturity.

    obviously no man would want to read something like that
    There's a point in there to do with gender roles in society, i think.
    A thought: Calling it "chick lit" could be observing a truth in that it's only read by women (in general), and that disparity doesn't have much to do with its quality, but because of sexism in society (like that quote from The Cement Garden about it being ok for girls to wear jeans, but it's considered degrading for a man to wear a dress.
    Does that sound likely?
    If so, it could explain where people like Pat are coming from when they use the term (and also why people get so up in arms when the "PC crowd" criticise it - because they think it's just observing a truth and the critics are just getting their knickers in a twist), but that doesn't stop it from being harmful for the exact reason you give earlier (about it being a "very small step" between the intended meaning and the sexist implication).

    Date: 17 October 2007 02:08 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] koyotesdaughter.livejournal.com
    the "girly" accusation is clearly to do with gender, where as "teenage boys in their bedrooms" refers to both gender and immaturity

    I think that the use of "girly" and "boy[ish]" in these generalizations rather than "womanly" and "manly" is really what's telling of the immaturity levels. I'm not sure that "teenage" and "bedroom" add much to the generalization, unless there's a much larger societal group of teenage boys getting all hot and bothered over Gandalf than I would have guessed.

    More tellingly, the use of "girly" alone versus "teenage boys" implies that the female audience will always be immature, whereas the male audience outgrows such pulp reading tastes.

    Date: 17 October 2007 02:18 pm (UTC)
    From: [identity profile] rockstarwookie.livejournal.com
    I'm not sure that "teenage" and "bedroom" add much to the generalization, unless there's a much larger societal group of teenage boys getting all hot and bothered over Gandalf than I would have guessed.
    It probably doesn't, except that's the way the generalisation is used whenever I've encountered it.

    I think it implies that people who use this generalisation have the perception that all Fantasy is about sexual fantasising with descriptions of fit women in skimpy outfits and big muscle-bound Heroic men having their way with them.

    I had several embarrassing moments as a teenager after I replied to someone who asked me what I was reading and seeing them make incorrect assumptions about me.

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