Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Things I will not do to my characters. Ever.

I am not in the habit of cut-tagging my crankiness, but in this case, I will, because I'm going to be discussing the sexual abuse of women, and I try not to be triggery when I don't have to be. This is your notification, and your warning.

There are a lot of ways to reach me; I try to be accessible and responsive whenever possible. Sometimes, this leads to my being asked questions I would never dream of asking an author who wasn't a) a personal friend, and b) in the process of getting drunk with me. I try to answer them nicely, for the most part, assuming I can answer them at all (I can't, always; some questions simply can't be answered).

Last night, I was asked—in so many words—when either Toby or one of the Price girls was finally going to be raped.

Not "if." Not "do you think." But "when," and "finally." Because it is a foregone conclusion, you see, that all women must be raped, especially when they have the gall to run around being protagonists all the damn time. I responded with confusion. The questioner provided a list of scenarios wherein these characters were "more than likely" to encounter sexual violence. These included Verity forgetting to change out of her tango uniform before going on patrol, Toby being cocky, and Sarah walking home from class alone. Yes, even the ambush predator telepath with a "don't notice me" field is inevitably getting raped.

When. Finally. Inevitably.

My response: "None of my protagonists are getting raped. I do not want to write that."

Their response: "I thought you had respect for your work. That's just unrealistic."

Verity is the bastard daughter of Dazzler and Batman. Toby is what happens when Tinker Bell embraces her inner bitch and starts wearing pants. Velveteen brings toys to life and uses them to fight the powers of darkness. Sarah is a hot mathematician who looks like Zooey Deschanel but is actually a hyper-evolved parasitic wasp. The unrealistic part about all these characters? Is that they haven't been raped.

Needless to say, I was a little bit annoyed, and I still am.

Statistically speaking, one in six women will be raped in her lifetime. This is just the statistic we know; it doesn't account for the fact that right now, reporting rape is a minefield all of its own, and many women choose not to subject themselves to that process. I do not know how many of my friends have been raped. I know that five of them are safe because of me, if you trust statistics. So you know. There's that.

Rape in fiction can be a powerful and important thing. It can be used to make important statements, it can be used to drive important stories. I love Robin McKinley's Deerskin as much because of the discomfort it causes me as for the beauty it contains. There are authors I will always trust, or try to trust, and it's important to show uncomfortable things through fiction. I am not saying that no one should write about rape, ever.

But rape in fiction can also be a problematic and belittling thing, used to put cocky heroines in their places. When Janet goes to Caughterha despite being told not to, her punishment is rape by the eponymous Tam Lin. When a superheroine needs a deeper, edgier backstory, there's always some previously third-tier villain with a de-powering ray and an agenda waiting in the wings. I read a lot of horror, a lot of comics, and a lot of urban fantasy, and the one thing these three things have in common is rape. Lots and lots and lots of rape.

And I don't wanna write that.

I do not understand—I will not understand, I refuse to understand—why rape has to be on the table for every story with a female protagonist, or even a strong female supporting cast. Why it's so assumed that I'm being "unrealistic" when I say that none of my female characters are going to be raped. Why this "takes the tension out of the story." There is plenty of tension without me having to write about something that upsets both me and many of my readers, thanks.

Toby will not be getting raped. Verity, Alice, Sarah, Antimony, and the rest of the InCryptid girls will not be getting raped. Velveteen will not be getting raped. Rose will not be getting raped. If this makes my work unrealistic, then fine. There's a reason I write science fiction and fantasy.

But I do not write rape. And the fact that this somehow makes me "unrealistic," rather than making me an author who makes choices about what she wants to write...that's the part I find upsetting.

You know. In addition to everything else.
Tags: cranky blonde is cranky, don't be dumb
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I will definitely stay cranky, and if someone made that bingo card, I would get in trouble for assault shortly thereafter.

I haven't had to deal with rape fanfic yet, thank the gods. I know it's coming.

Some people.
Possible alternate viewpoint? I'm not trying to dismiss your view or belittle your trepidation, and I do understand that there are some really gratuitous and awful non-consensual fanfic out there (worse than rape in every other media I'll contest though), but I'm a rape survivor and I read fanfic. Sometimes I read fanfic dealing explicitly with rape because when it's done well it can actually help me cope and get through some pretty dark headspaces. I do better with rape in fanfic than I do rape in any other media because fanfic authors tend to be really, really good at giving trigger warnings so I can approach those stories when I'm able to and when I need to without being blindsided by it.

I love the level of trigger warning provided in fanfic. But this is the one area in which "these are my characters, I don't want this to happen to them" kicks in for me at all. I won't say "don't write this," because I don't try to dictate what fanfic people can and can't write. I would never have listened to a creator who did that to me. But the idea makes me really uncomfortable, in a really big way.
That's totally fair and understandable. I was more hoping to offer something that might make it easier to cope with *should* it happen than to criticize you for being uncomfortable with the thought or try to convince you that you shouldn't be.

Re: trigger warnings, I have nothing but agreement with you here. I wish that mainstream commercial media would jump on this bandwagon. The most common argument against it that I hear is the spoiler one, but I don't know... knowing certain things happen doesn't really change the experience of discovering how it happens, right? The process rather than the actual events is what makes a story. For me, anyway. Informed choices are the best choices and it would be nice not to relive the Dragon Tattoo thing ever again. (Was recommended to me by a lot of people, none of whom said anything other than mystery-thriller with a kick ass punk heroine... I ended up having a very shitty weekend after seeing the film)

Anyway, I babble. Thank you for your response, and for this excellent post. I should have said that first I think XD