+ Reply to Thread
Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 1 2 3 LastLast
Results 11 to 20 of 26
  1. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by tnh View Post
    If you're trying to think up a short backstory for a female character, just to make her a bit more three-dimensional, I don't recommend putting a rape in her history. Too many writers have used that as an unintegrated, practically standalone detail on an otherwise unexamined character, thus creating the unfortunate impression that being raped was either the only significant event they could imagine happening to a woman, or the only one they considered important. Whatever the etiology, the fact is that many readers (male and female) have gotten cynical about that assertion. Their eyes glaze over the moment they see it.
    Amen! I actually put my foot down and insisted on a no rape or attempted rape rule when my husband and I started writing our series. I'm so sick of writers thinking that anything high fantasy/historical medieval has to have rape, usually of the main female protagonist.

  2. #12
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    New Jersey
    Posts
    2
    I think I may know where you are coming from. I was extremely self-conscious that my female characters were shallow or that I was missing some point of view that would make them believable. An even worse fear was that I was presenting them in a chauvinistic and offensive manner. To work through this, I would enlist women who were friends of mine to critique the portrayals. After a few of these review sessions, I got a feel as to how to properly research and flesh out the female protagonists/antagonists well enough that they became just another character to invent through the writing process.
    To the fool, he who speaks wisdom will sound foolish.
    -Euripides

  3. #13
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    New Hampshire
    Posts
    7
    I think, for me at least, it's possibly easier to write about a strong female lead than a male one. As I'm a guy in real life, I tend to miss some of the key things that others might want to read about in a male protagonist. When I have to write from the female perspective, it makes me think a lot more about how they should be, what they should do, and all of that. It's a lot easier for me to get into the character in a good way, because there's so many more details I have to think about and make work. I don't know if that makes much sense, but that's how it seems to be for me.

    When I write male characters, it seems more difficult sometimes because I forget to add certain things or just ignore parts that I tend to think of as matter-of-fact since I might take the situation/thing/whatever for granted as I deal with that kind of stuff daily. I much prefer writing female characters for this reason because it's just something entirely different from my everyday life and I find that interesting in its own way.

  4. #14
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    183
    Might be helpful to study the lives of modern women athletes. The locker room culture that develops around professional athletes is startlingly similar to the military culture (with some obvious differences, lol). Read a biography on some female from an athletics team will probably help you pick out details of character that will stand out as contrary to the overall perception... and flesh out the character.

  5. #15
    Super Moderator
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Right here, on your screen.
    Posts
    475
    One pro writer I know recommends reading romance novels. He says that if you want to understand women, read the stuff they read. I'm pretty sure he means the high-end well-recommended ones. Studying Barbara Cartland will just give you a speech impediment.

  6. #16
    I was at a reception at a conference my wife was attending and while looking around the room noticed a young woman. She was wearing a button-down shirt and slacks that had a masculine cut to them. They were fitted and very flattering to her figure, but the tailoring was nevertheless very masculine. She had broad shoulders and thin hips--the body type you would usually see on an active swimmer. Her short blonde hair was pulled back in a simple pony-tail, and her face had only the barest touch of make-up. She was standing with a hand on her hip which was jutting out sharply to the right. Her stance was wide. She was a strange combination of masculine and feminine.

    When writing a female character in a recent story, I thought back to this woman and the impression she had made on me from across the room. I needed a strong character, so I started by giving her a strong presence. What she said and what she did was almost secondary to who she was. And what she was started with how she presented herself to the world.

    Hope that helps.
    Daniel J Dombrowski
    Science Fiction Writer

    Check out my blog where I discuss my attempts at writing, my influences, and the things that are distracting me at the moment.

    I post my short stories on HubPages at the moment. Click here to read my most recent stories.

  7. #17
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    183
    Not really the point of his post, but archguyscifi touches on an interesting point: Its not all that hard to characterize a woman from a Male POV. The challenge is writing a woman from a woman's PoV and being male. That tends to be where my wife throws her hands up and says a character is obviously written by a male

  8. #18
    Super Moderator
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Right here, on your screen.
    Posts
    475
    Wide shoulders, narrow hips, masculine body language? My first thought would have been to wonder whether she's transgendered.

  9. #19
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    183
    Or a victim of bovine growth hormone.

  10. #20
    Quote Originally Posted by tnh View Post
    Wide shoulders, narrow hips, masculine body language? My first thought would have been to wonder whether she's transgendered.
    Har har. Go find a picture of Amanda Beard and tell me that a swimmer's build can't be attractive.
    Daniel J Dombrowski
    Science Fiction Writer

    Check out my blog where I discuss my attempts at writing, my influences, and the things that are distracting me at the moment.

    I post my short stories on HubPages at the moment. Click here to read my most recent stories.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts