I originally planned to have a private discussion with a friend regarding the place where Feminism and Joss Whedon's body of work, specifically his characters, intersect/overlap (or don't intersect/overlap as the case may be). We both thought it might be more interesting to have that discussion here where more people could comment on the topic. I'm
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img height="400" src="http://whatever.com/img.jpg"
Of course, substitute whatever you want the displayed height to be for the "400" number.
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My beef with Whedon and his Strong Female Characters is that, one, they kind of really aren't (strong, that is), and I'm not entirely certain Whedon actually understands feminism. Or if he does understand it, I don't think he is one. He seems a little too interested in either setting women on a pedestal or tearing them down--or both at the same time.
You know I'm coming from this having not seen Buffy. And honestly, as much as I adore you, I'm not sure I ever will be able to watch it. For one, there's just SO MUCH of it, and for two, I've read too many articles like this one that make me go NO THANK YOU.
That article also points out the horrible issues with Firefly. Issues that I noticed while I was watching the show. I hated the mixed messages regarding the way Inara was (theoretically) written with how she actually behaved and was treated. I hated Kaylee's increasingly grating magical chipperness which bordered on her ( ... )
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But I think we can both agree what feminism is not, and that would be things that pretend to build up women but in actuality and practice undermine the portrayal of them as strong and capable.
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I would say, yes, he does.
the prostitution thing seems incidental
But it isn't. It isn't incidental. It's crucial to the plot of the show that she sells her body. If it was "incidental," she could have been a plain old spy. Or a cop. Or something. But no, she's a sex worker. And that is problematic, Jason. It is not incidental. And it is something he chose to make crucial to the character.
I think you can afford to be less...diligent? about this sort of thing (saying it isn't really about prostitution, or that only happens in a few episodes) because you are viewing it from a place of male privilege. And there's nothing wrong with being in a place of privilege. You just need to be aware that you have it, and that it will always color your perceptions.
And obviously, Whedon is writing from a place of privilege, too. I'm sure he finds it okay to think "Well, this rape issue doesn't happen very often in the story, and rapes really do happen in real life, so I'll use it to promote this ( ... )
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