sartorias wrote
an entry a few weeks ago that I missed until now, mostly wondering about whether male writers and female writers create epic fantasy differently. The conversation threads are great -- much literary analysis on the meaning of epic fantasy happens in one thread, which I found quite engaging and informative, and then wrote my response based on
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I've been thinking a lot about mothers in fiction (for obvious reasons), and I really think there should be more of them that are credited for the kind of strength required to be both a nurturer and a protector -- both of those jobs come into both mother and father roles.
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I haven't had enough caffeine yet to come up with any more insightful thoughts than that, but I'm looking forward to seeing this discussion as it unfolds. I'm very interested in these ideas of gendered heroism.
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I hope that conversation does indeed unfold. I've been thinking a lot lately about how there seems to be only one popularly accepted version of what it means to be an empowered or strong woman, especially in fantasy fiction, which seems ridiculously limiting.
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And Molly Weasley is awesome.
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Yeah, for either men or women, the role of defending the home and supporting the family is a vital one, and requires strength.
I think it's harder to dramatize hearth-oriented strength and heroism. It's very easy to see what the threat and conflict is when a black knight comes to town and cuts down all who oppose him; it's harder if the threat isn't a weapon and resistance isn't in the form of a fight. However, it's most certainly **possible** to tell a story that's gripping even without clear externalized threats and danger.
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And I think you're right about the sort of stigma attached to acknowledging the hearth as a form of strength. But I think it's equally limiting to go the other way. Valuing the female warrior above all other strong women also seems to reinforce the idea that traditionally male roles are more valuable than traditionally female ones -- which robs women of their power in a different way.
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