The idea of writing a “strong female character” isn’t enough.
As shorthand, it sounds noble. It seems spot on. But a lot of writers — and writing advice about the subject — seem to get it wrong. I get asked about this a lot, I guess because write women or girl characters like Miriam Black or Atlanta Burns who, on paper, kick a lot of ass.
And that is often the focus of the question — they’re characters who can fight, scrap, throw a punch, fire a gun, and that seems to end up the focus of the question. It’s where the buck stops. But for me, that’s never where it begins. It’s not even what makes them who they are.
Instead of writing “strong female characters,” try to aim for “women or girls that possess agency.” I’ve defined agency before and so I’ll repeat that definition here:
Character agency is… a demonstration of the character’s ability to make decisions and affect the story. This character has motivations all her own. She is active more than she is reactive. She pushes on the plot more than the plot pushes on her. Even better, the plot exists as a direct result of the character’s actions.
Strong is a word with an often male connotation — it carries with it a lot of baggage. And what we end up with are female characters who are physically strong and little else. Meaning, they can fight, scrap, throw punches, fire guns.
But their ability to fight isn’t what makes them interesting.
What makes them interesting is that they choose to fight.
And it’s that word — “choose” — that matters.
We focus so much on their Powers, we forget about empowering them with the ability to choose, to have wants and needs and to make decisions based on those things. (You know, like real people do.) We think of Abilities and Skills like they’re stats on a character sheet rather than thinking about what abilities women possess inside the story to affect that story. We think of Powers like She Can Fly or She Knows Kung Fu or She Has Mastered The Ancient Art Of Laser Kegels when we should be focusing on the character’s internal power, her narrative power to push on the story, to be a well-rounded human being, no matter how vulnerable, no matter how strong.
Look at it this way: video game characters are notoriously without agency largely by design. The technology of a game doesn’t allow for a great deal of free-range character choice — in Halo, I can’t take my character outside the mission boundaries. In Tomb Raider I can’t say, “I want Lara Croft to leave this life of horrific blood-soaked spelunking to become a well-paid, respected accountant,” because she’s not my character. I only inhabit her and can only inhabit that character insofar as the technology allows, but the illusion is enough inside a video game for the most part because it feels active — video games are very good at lending you the illusion of choice, making you feel like, because you can choose a bow or a gun or because you can go down the left passage instead of the right, you have agency in the world.
But you’re not writing a video game character.
The illusion of choice is not enough.
The physical, violent strength of the character is not a meaningful metric.
Many “strong female characters” feel like something ripped out of a video game. Or worse, they feel like toys — objects that look tough, hold guns, wield swords, have karate-chop arms, but are ultimately plastic, posable action figures. Empty and maneuverable, they go where you tell them to go because they’re just devices.
Alison Bechdel coined the Bechdel Test, which asks if the story (or an overall body of storytelling) features at least two women who talk about something other than a man.
Gail Simone talks about the “Women in Refrigerators” problem, where women and girls inside comic books are used as fodder — raped, killed, or otherwise excised of power through violence (and often to make a male character feel something). The only power these women have in the story is to be damaged enough to motivate the story or the male characters in it.
Kelly Sue DeConnick talks about the “Sexy Lamp” test, which says, if you can replace the woman in the story with a sexy lamp and it doesn’t affect the story outcome, well, fuck you, that’s what.
It’s no surprise that these three amazing writers come out of comic books, where women superheroes are often hyper-sexualized and contextualized as objects — and you’ll note that’s the theme that runs through these three tests, and what I’m getting at here. Women in fiction are often presented as objects. They’re pieces to move around a chess board. They’re toys and devices and objects of lust and precious treasures to save and mirrors to reflect ManPain and things to break so that ManTears happen. They’re sexy lamps, cold corpses, and singular creatures who only exist in relation to the male characters around them. And we need to test against this.
(This is ostensibly why we see a lot of pushback against a story like Twilight or its sexualized fan-fic reiteration, 50 Shades of Grey — it’s because of the toxicity that results when your women and girl protagonists are given almost no agency within the stories themselves. They’re just pretty dolls floating down river, picked up by men who find them fetching.)
Thing is, we often expect that we’re undercutting this objectification by making the characters “strong, kick-ass female characters,” but what happens is:
Forget about kicking ass.
That’s not the metric you need to worry about.
The only ass that your female character need to kick is the ass of the story — that’s the power you want to give them. The power of agency. They can be sexy and sexual without being sexualized or objectified. They can kick ass or not kick ass or have Power or Not Have Powers as long as you elevate them above mere action figures (“Look how poseable she is when she does her sexy high-kicks!”) They can be vulnerable or flawed or unlikeable as long as you treat them like real people, not like video game characters or a list of abilities or dolls or lamps or The Reason That Dude Does The Thing He’s Meant To Do. They’re not proxies, they’re not mannequins, they’re not mirrors, they’re not Walking Talking FleshLights, they’re not princesses in towers waiting to be saved, they’re not emotionless ass-kicking chicks who still don’t kick as much ass as the hero. I’d even argue that calling them “female characters” has its problems because it sounds clinical, distant, a characteristic, a check box, a footnote.
Think of them as women or as girls.
Think of them as people.
Then give them agency within your story, within its world, and equal to the other characters.
So endeth my rant.
And now I ask you:
Who are some of your favorite women and girls in fiction (books, comics, film, TV, what-have-you) that possess agency? Drop in the comments and sound off. Offer your thoughts, too — am I getting this wrong? This feels right to me, but happy as always to discuss. Just be polite, because the SPAM OUBLIETTE awaits those who act as dire shitbirds.
Sandra Lindsey says:
Two examples: Autumn Haven in Rachel Gibson’s “Any Man of Mine”. She’s a single mum & a small business owner. As the ‘hero’ of this romance says, she’s amazing because she could just sit back & live on the child support money he pays her for their son, but instead she’s chosen to pursue her own career & build something for the future.
2nd I can’t remember the name of the book but it’s a childrens illustrated story about a princess who is told she should wait around for her prince. So she does, but after they get married he also leaves her sitting around bored while he goes off & has adventures. So when a dragon calls at the castle the princess chooses to go off & have adventures with him instead of waiting for her prince 🙂
February 17, 2015 — 2:03 AM
Ashlee Jade says:
“They can be sexy and sexual without being sexualized or objectified.” THANK YOU!!! Can people get it through their stupid heads that ‘helpless masturbation aid’ and ‘manipulative soul-sucking siren’ aren’t the only two sexual identities a woman can inhabit?! People are weird about sex in general and women having sex in particular. I am so perplexed by it all.
February 17, 2015 — 2:23 AM
shelton keys dunning says:
Ditto.
And then there’s lesbian erotica, where you would think the situation would be better, but no. Same issues, just now you’ve got two or more females with the same problem. At least, that’s what I’ve been dealing with lately at my editing desk. Some authors either can’t see it in their own writing, or they refuse to see it. Sad, sad.
February 17, 2015 — 5:58 AM
smithster says:
I wouldn’t be surprised if authors couldn’t actually see it. These tropes are so ingrained that we don’t always recognize when we’re falling back on them, particularly if we haven’t got a well-thought-out plot or character and it’s far too easy to fall back on something familiar. I’ve found myself doing it, and (for me anyway) lack of planning was a big part of the reason why. When I catch myself falling into one of those grooves, I try to flip it, ie role reverse or change them into the one taking action, or if they’re not in a position to do so have them make a conscious choice about how to mentally or emotionally handle the situation.
February 17, 2015 — 9:19 AM
addy says:
whenever someone mentions the illusion of choice in video games i immediatly think “whould you kindly?”
but anyway, another great post. my favourite females are mainly in sci fi as the genre seems to further ahead so Zoe Washburne, Samantha Carter and Aeryn Sun to name a few.
February 17, 2015 — 6:23 AM
addy says:
Oh also the harry potter series. Everyone would be dead by the first movie if it weren’t for Hermione.
February 17, 2015 — 6:25 AM
Matthew W. Quinn says:
And Harry and Ron wouldn’t have done so well in school either. 🙂
February 17, 2015 — 10:16 AM
Saranga (@SarangaComics) says:
Granny Weatherwax and Tiffany Aching from the Discworld books. They are my most absolute favourite female characters ever.
February 17, 2015 — 6:35 AM
Catkins says:
hell. yes.
February 17, 2015 — 7:45 AM
C. A. Bridges says:
Practically every major female character in the Discworld books, really.I love how the witches are not all strong in the same ways, but they definitely make their own decisions. Not every woman in Discworld has agency, but no less so than many of the male characters.
February 17, 2015 — 7:17 PM
Harvey Stanbrough says:
Wow. I subscribed for awhile, but it was too much schmoozing and not enough about writing. Then I just put the URL in a Read folder and visited now and then because, you know, about one in ten posts, maybe, might have something about writing instead of how to kiss up. But no. Ugh.
Jeez, Wendig, if you’d just stop kissing up just a LITTLE bit you could help so many people. But it’s far easier to just blow smoke, blather along about one topic or another bearing the PC Stamp of Approval, and then lie back and enjoy the golden rain from all the adoring fans who are clapping politely and nodding and smiling and saying intelligent things that really matter like “great post” and “keep up the good work” and “boy that one should really help you get laid.”
As to powerful women, I know a lot of ’em. I’ve never heard one use the term “agency” unless they’re talking about the CIA. I admire them. That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t try to protect them if something bad were about to happen, and it doesn’t render them sexless. The ones I know, though, despise kissing up as much as I do, and even moreso when it’s directed at them. I can hear them now:
1. How dare you classify me in a “type”?
2. And you’re gonna give me “agency”? Seriously? Who died and made you god of the realim?
3. I take what I want, pal, and when I want a male counterpart, I don’t pick one that’s constantly fawning like a 17th century fop about how wonderful I am.
Then again, they and I might be wrong. Maybe it IS up to you to make sure women are treated with respect and granted “agency.” Maybe they just can’t pull it off without your assistance, you know, them being all weak and stuff.
Ahh, that feels better.
February 17, 2015 — 6:45 AM
terribleminds says:
Then you’re free to go away to read another blog, Harvey. One that conforms to your biases.
That said, you might notice this post has a great deal to do with writing, and the term “agency” is one specific to characters. And I do at least one to three writing posts per week at this site, as actual readers of this site know.
Again, though, since you cannot summon even a modicum of politeness, please don’t let the door hit you where evolutionary biology split you.
— c.
February 17, 2015 — 6:51 AM
Harvey Stanbrough says:
You are right, of course, as in all things PC. I should have said thank you, and I should not have used such rude language. I guess. Not sure exactly what wasn’t politely put, except that I disagreed. However, again, you are right. Not sure what biases you’re talking about either. Nature, maybe. Instinct, maybe. Kick all the plugs out of all the walls permanently and see who rises to the top. Bet there’ll be strong women and strong men, and they won’t all be exactly equal and some won’t be less strong because it’s only fair because they’ve been strong before. At any rate, thank you for at least allowing a dissenting opinion through. Ah, and for your time in responding. And for all the help you give to those who listen, seriously. ‘Bye now.
February 17, 2015 — 7:11 AM
terribleminds says:
I’ll pretend for a half-a-second you actually had a legitimate dissenting opinion rather than just wanting to call me out for — well, what, blowing smoke? Kissing ass? Being PC?
Your comment before suggested a grave mis-reading of the post if you think I’m talking about women in real life instead of women in fiction. I don’t control women in real life, nor do I want to. Nor do I think they’re “weak” and need my help — but that’s where some of your biases come in. (Sirens going off anytime anyone mentions political correctness.)
That said, real life still demands that women have agency — political, social, psychological, emotional, physical. It’s arguably one of the cruxes of the entire feminist movement: to give women choice, decision, power. Even something as simple as consent when it comes to sex is related to agency. It’s not my job to give it to them, but I’m happy to offer a hand and I’m happy to signal boost.
Again, given some of your past comments at this blog, I might suggest that there are better blogs for you to follow.
Good luck.
— c.
February 17, 2015 — 7:29 AM
Jenni Hill (@Jenni_Hill) says:
“boy that one should really help you get laid.”
Ah, yes, because the only reason men ever treat women like people is when they’re competing for our romantic attention. Of course.
February 17, 2015 — 7:52 AM
terribleminds says:
I actually hear that one a lot.
“YOU’RE JUST TRYING TO GET LAID.”
Not even sell books. Just… get laid. Like I’m paying the ladies a compliment and buying them a metaphorical dinner and now they’re all gonna fawn and swoon. I’ve hit the Konami code and now the sexy robot women will be mine. It spits on the entire idea of women with agency — both with characters and in real life.
— c.
February 17, 2015 — 7:56 AM
Chelle says:
Here’s a silly question for you… Last I checked, you’re married and, as far as I know, monogamous with your wife. How does she feel about all of these women and robot women fawning all over you trying to get in your pants?
February 17, 2015 — 12:48 PM
Bruce says:
“…Konami code…” 🙂 Yeah. True gamer.
February 17, 2015 — 5:46 PM
mljohn says:
He’s not talking about allowing REAL WOMEN in REAL LIFE to make decisions. He’s talking about writing characters who make decisions as if they were real people. The whole thing about being a writer is that you can control those people whom you have created, and that you write better by creating female people who more closely resemble the ones you find in real life.
February 18, 2015 — 11:05 AM
Morticia says:
I have read this post a few times and seriously, your comments are just…weird. Chuck just wants to get the “PC Stamp of Approval” so he can be popular and collect adoring fans? Are you seriously suggesting he is writing about how women are objectified in the entertainment industry as a ploy instead of being truly inspired by the topic? Using the term “PC” in the way you do is code for the desire to avoid examining these tropes and about being able to write whatever bigoted nonsense you might choose. I mean really, why be bothered by inclusivity, empathy and having to think about this irritating sexism stuff? Really, go read some Ben Carson or something, he should make you feel all warm and fuzzy in your homogeneous world again.
That said, I also find it bizarre that you feel Chuck is somehow here to serve you and your writing agenda. I love the fact the Chuck writes about all kinds of things (oh, noes, did I just become an adoring fan saying intelligent things?!?) because I think he’s a great writer and I love his perspective. It’s funny. It makes me laugh. If Shakespeare were alive today and wanted to write about, I don’t know, men in heals and wigs with live birds, hella ya I’d read that right now. Does it really have to be all comedy this and tragedy that?
You’re not paying Chuck to write his posts, you’re entitled to nothing. Your sense of indignation over him not writing “more writing posts” is strange. If you don’t like it, that’s why they made the unsubscribe option. Or better yet, go pay for some writing instruction since you need a refund policy and all.
So I say, carry on Chuck! Speak your mind about everything you do (not that you need MY permission). I appreciate you for stirring the pot and offering your knowledge – your very, very useful knowledge for actual writers. You make me think and wow, for a writer that’s a gift. It’s why I’ve bought your books and referred my writey friends to you and posted your posts on Facebook (don’t worry, no kissing up required, I do that because their worthy). You’ve helped me become a better writer. Thanks from a nodding and smiling fan. *claps politely*
February 19, 2015 — 12:48 AM
Menthol_Penguin says:
I adore Doc Yewll in the Defiance TV show, sarcastic amd funny. I should watch the second season really and get a copy of the first.
February 17, 2015 — 7:12 AM
Morticia says:
Agreed!!
February 18, 2015 — 2:18 AM
MakeLifeMemorable says:
Dana Scully has to be at the top of my list!
February 17, 2015 — 7:47 AM
Catkins says:
There is a character called Mosca Mye in ‘Fly By Night’ by Frances Hardinge. The story is set in an alternate early 18th century england. Mosca lives in a grim little village with her father, the disgraced scholar, Quillam Mye. He made her a freak by teaching her to read. But he died when she was young and left her to the care of her aunt and uncle. She grew up starved of books. One day a stranger with wonderful words comes to the village and spins his tales and wins his way into the heart of the everyone. Turns out he’s a fraudster and is promptly arrested. So Mosca, with her pet goose Saracen, set him free and what with one thing and another, she more or less singlehandedly prevents an extremist faction from taking over the realm. Lots of agency. And an amazing book too.
February 17, 2015 — 8:00 AM
Lian Tanner says:
Totally agree, Catkins. Frances Hardinge writes great girl characters, and Mosca Mye is one of her best.
February 18, 2015 — 3:57 PM
Mutant1988 says:
Honestly, I think nearly any video game character can be written off as a device and not just female characters. The latter is just more notable because there’s much fewer of them.
Agency is a tricky proposition in video games, because you are always torn between player and character agency and the disconnect does more often than not ruin the story or the gameplay. The trope “Cutscene Incompetence” springs to mind.
I don’t know really, it just doesn’t seem like a discussion that especially applies to female characters. I think that if you swapped the genders, you would end up with the same thing, simply because of the nature of video game storytelling.
You can’t remove player agency, because then it’s not a game. If you only have player agency, there’s no character agency (The blank or “Create a character” design).
I’m happy to be proven wrong on this though, but I think that the more pressing issue is to get a greater female influence into the industry and an increased influence on writing integrating with gameplay, to make characters play as they are written. That is, to have characters not have their personality flattened to accommodate inserting that of the player, for the purpose of driving the gameplay.
Lara Crofts growth from scared survivor to gleeful vengeance seeking goddess of death springs to mind. The events that lead to this transformation are just too cartoonishly over the top for me to take it seriously. Hell, one of the very first things that happen is that she is impaled on a bit of rebar and the only lasting effect of it is that she limps for the next 5 minutes. It is one example of the gameplay and set pieces (Which almost always inflicted horrific injury on Lara) definitely undermining the character’s arc.
A lot of it is because the story from the outset leaned towards a stealth survival horror game, but the design document said third person shooter, so the growth of the character is sped up to a ridiculous degree to get to that point, making the initial premise feel a bit wasted. Good game still though, but the story (And the character) would probably have been better of had it been two different games.
I’d love to have a game that plays the clichés perfectly straight though, just with all the genders swapped out. It would make for an interesting study on how such a thing would be received. Would it be dismissed as misandristic reactionary propaganda? Or considered the same cheesy popcorn entertainment like it’s male centric compatriots?
Edit: Hmm, spell checker doesn’t have an entry for misandry. That’s either funny or sad.
February 17, 2015 — 8:05 AM
Leona says:
The female protagonist in The Empire Trilogy by Raymond e. Feist and Janny Wurtz is the best female protagonist in the fantasy literature. She shines with her diplomacy skills, genius mind and political talents, she is not a fodder or victim of video game figure. A proper ‘strong female’ character.
February 17, 2015 — 8:08 AM
Dae says:
I was just scrolling down to say this.
I read those books when I was eleven. I cannot begin to describe how important Mara was to me.
A few other great examples from fantasy lit are Sabriel and Lirael from Garth Nix’s Abhorsen Chronicles, all the principle lady characters in CS Friedman’s Magister Trilogy, and Phedre, Melisande, and Ysandre from Jacqueline Carrey’s Kushiel’s Legacy series.
February 17, 2015 — 2:04 PM
Aquitaine says:
I really like your point about allowing the women/girls in stories to be flawed/to mess up/to make mistakes and to take responsibility. I find these types of characterisation to be really fun to watch.
My favourite of recent years has been the Rebecca Hall’s character in the period drama Parade’s End. She is initially incredibly un-likeable, cruel and cold until you come to realise that she is highly intelligent and rebelling against a society that restricts her based on her gender, she is vulnerable and funny. I want to see more characters like her out there!
So get writing folks, you write it, I’ll read it 🙂
February 17, 2015 — 8:23 AM
Jordan says:
I have been thinking about this wonderful blog post, which I had the pleasure of reading yesterday. I am in the midst of my second round of edits on my first novel, and something has always bothered me about my favorite character, who is female, and that is that while she has a great deal to do in the overarching story (if the book gets picked up for 3 books), in this first book, she really doesn’t do much.
Your discussion of Agency has made me decide to dramatically change the interaction between her and another major character, to have him react rather than ignore her, so that what she says and does has an impact on the story, rather than have her simply be window dressing.
I would love for the readers of the book to love this character as much as I love her, or hate her, as she does some pretty despicable stuff. She wields neither gun nor sword, nor any weapon at all. She is not particularly strong, and doesn’t have the trappings of Bad Assedness that one normally associates with the term, but she needs to have an impact on the story. She needs to affect change. She needs to have Agency.
Thank you so much for making me think about how to improve this character, my most loved character, and perhaps bringing future readers around to seeing her the way I see her.
February 17, 2015 — 8:54 AM
Ashlynn says:
I would like to think my female MC have agency. But sometimes not being able to see the forest for the trees, I’m not sure. I will say I think my latest does, my first one doesn’t, the one I just sent to the editor does (I think)….but you can be sure I will think on this everytime I create a new female character and will try to do exactly that.
Agency is a new term for me, but I thanks for always trying to teach me something new.
February 17, 2015 — 8:55 AM
Kaley says:
I’m going to vote for Malta in Robin Hobb’s liveships series.
NOW HEAR ME OUT!
At the beginning she doesn’t believe that she has any agency. That because she’s a girl she should be taken care of ,and not have to worry about making choices. However, by the end, she is arguably one of the more stubborn and decisive characters in the entire series. She’s still incredibly feminine and physically weak-a polar opposite to her aunt (who is a strong character in her own right). Both of these characters have flaws and strengths that mirror each other incredibly well. This a big part of why I love this series and this author. They show just two of many ways in which girls can be strong and (bit off track) I think that might the type of relationship/character growth G.R.R. Martin is trying to show with Arya and Sansha…although I do think Hobb does it better.
I also vote for Agent Carter, but prepare to be annoyed. People online seem to think that a woman kicking the crap out of a room of agents is beyond belief, despite taking place in a universe where a man turns into a large, green rage machine and Nordic Gods make an appearance. There’s already talk of cancellation.
February 17, 2015 — 9:15 AM
Gry Ranfelt says:
YES! I just mentioned Malta in my own comment! 😀 She’s so great. And yes, way better at giving the point that Sansa – so far.
Though I disagree about Malta thinking she doesn’t have to make choices in the beginning. She definitely manipulates her world but thinks responsibility lies on the men and that she’ll never have to worry about the larger world.
Ah, so great to see someone else appreciating this character!
February 17, 2015 — 1:50 PM
tanaudel says:
This just reminded me of how true to real life giving agency to characters is.
I just heard a reading of some WWI diaries, in which one of the background people of the diarist’s life is a well-brought up, privileged, gentle young woman. The other nurses around her know they have to take care of her, keep her out of danger, and get her home safely. But in the end she’s the one who up and takes charge of the evacuation (soldiers, nurses, patients) as the front moves towards them. She’s not a main ‘character’, not even a character, just a real person in the real diarists life. But such an interesting one!
February 17, 2015 — 9:10 PM
decayingorbits says:
A couple of recent reads come to mind: the first is the character of Violet Masala in Greg Egan’s “Distress.” Not only a brilliant woman, but one who sets her own path in spite of the male protagonist who is going to great lengths to protect her — she’s basically saying throughout “Thanks but get the fuck out of my way.” The second is the character of Chiku Akinya in Alistair Reynolds’ “On The Steel Breeze.” Another strong female character with considerable agency.
Oh, and is it just a bit ironic that both “Twilight” and “50 Shades” not only sold like hotcakes but were written by women? Something to think about.
February 17, 2015 — 9:16 AM
smithster says:
re 50 Shades and Twilight – not really 🙂 One of the problems in the romance genre is that it’s saturated with abuse/damsels in distress tropes, and those two are not the first or the worst. Bad writers often fall back on them because it’s easy and a reliable seller. It’s a reliable seller because these tropes are drawn from the myths we tell ourselves about relationships in our society, which is why I have a hissy fit when I see critiques claiming that not reading or watching 50 Shades is going to make any damned bit of difference. A lot of those claims sound a like saving the silly wimmens from themselves, claims that have been made about romance (and other fantasy) for as long as the genre has existed. Personally I find the imaginative ones that are better written and get you into the head of the person going full on Stockholm syndrome a lot creepier. There are many good writers in the genre working very hard to do better, though. Now if one of those could just get on the big screen…
February 17, 2015 — 9:31 AM
decayingorbits says:
Speaking of Stockholm, who can forget the character Lisbeth Salander in The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo?
February 17, 2015 — 1:20 PM
Heather Wolfe says:
Lisbeth Salander from the Millenium Trilogy
February 17, 2015 — 9:30 AM
MrsBevyChurch says:
Arya from the series “A Song of Ice and Fire”. Even though she’s a young character, she has an overwhelming sense of vindication. She carries with her such tenacity in her beliefs and how she feels everything should be that her singular profile pulls you along with her. She contains the potential to move mountains and I’m thoroughly enjoying the path she continues to take.
February 17, 2015 — 9:35 AM
Gry Ranfelt says:
Interestingly, though, Arya is pushed this way or that by the plot with little to no power to choose for herself.
February 17, 2015 — 1:47 PM
Renée Layberry says:
Gillian Anderson as Stella Gibson in BBC’s The Fall is the most compelling, strongest, most believable female character I’ve seen portrayed on television.
February 17, 2015 — 10:54 AM
Chelle says:
I’m not sure if she’s been mentioned or not (I haven’t read all three pages of comments) but I really like the Agent Carter tv series. I like that she sticks up for herself. Yes, she’s treated like a dainty, helpless woman and glorified secretary but she doesn’t let her stop her from doing the things she feels are correct. Does she kick ass? Better than some of the men. Does she screw up? Hell yeah, but she is one of the more well-rounded female characters that I have seen in a long time.
February 17, 2015 — 10:57 AM
Henry Martin says:
Female characters, when strong in fiction, do not have to end up coming up as weak, or as kickass. The beauty of female characters, in general, is that they can be both tough and tender enough when needed be. That is the advantage female characters have over male characters. Where a tender, male protagonist may come across as weak and not believable in tough situations, the female protagonist has more of a leeway. We all know mothers, for example. Tender, caring, loving . . . but they can also be tough, mean, and downright nasty when protecting their children. It is the ability to survive in our contemporary world, combined with the ability to maintain one’s motherly instincts, what makes female characters so amazing.
I must admit that most of the female characters in fiction are either hapless romantics looking for a rescue, or secondary figures who play their part in a book as merely an accessory or a scene backdrop. Unfortunately, many authors do not write female characters well.
Nevertheless, on one of my literary explorations I came across a very unusual female character – Katla from the pen of a Dutch author, Martyn Halm. He writes the Amsterdam Assassin Series, which are worth checking out. https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/6586040.Martyn_V_Halm
Why do i say this? Well, Katla is not your typical female protagonist as she is not only strong (kicks ass like no other woman I read about), but can also be very tender when it comes to relationships 9among other things). The author wrote her character well, presenting a full human being, with her strengths and weaknesses, which do not take away from her, but rather add another dimension.
Personally, I admire our contemporary women juggling careers and families at the same time. There is nothing a woman cannot do – so why limit our fictional female protagonists?
February 17, 2015 — 1:07 PM
Gry Ranfelt says:
You’ve got it just right.
One of my favorite characters is Malta from the Liveship Series, who evolves from a spoiled brat to a brave, powerful woman who affects the plot way beyond it’s initial plot.
Elizabeth Bennet is also a great character and Yaxhiri from a Danish series that, sadly, does not have a lot of readers. I also really liked Claudia from Interview with the Vampire and, of course, the awesome ladies of the Avatar franchise. Aaaah. (Except Katara, who always annoyed me by being TOO powerful and TOO nice to the point of not being much mroe than nice, powerful waterbender)
February 17, 2015 — 1:47 PM
Bruce says:
I just started getting your newsletters. Great stuff. Keep it going strong.
When it comes to writing women or girls, how can male authors get it right? We’ve been told to “write what we know”. In my high school years, I started trying to write this idea of just women characters, and I didn’t even get off the ground with it. All I knew was I wanted to write a story where women/girls were seen as something more than victims. Do male authors just have to stay away from the subject of writing agency for women…or do we go and interview women? Really, what do women want to read about female characters?
February 17, 2015 — 1:59 PM
Luna says:
“Write what you know” isn’t limited to what you *already* know. That’s what research is for.
Try writing women as people with thoughts and feelings. ‘Cause that’s what we are. Use the strong women in your life as jumping-off points.
February 17, 2015 — 2:46 PM
smithster says:
No, male authors do not have to stay away, not by any means. Being a human with empathy is half the battle won, and the fact that you’re asking these questions is already a good thing. Part of the answer will lie in questioning the myths. When you read your writing, do you see yourself falling into the habit of the victims being female or children? Is the emotional one always a woman? Is the love interest always the opposite sex? Try gender swapping sometimes just for fun – does it suddenly give you a whole new spin on the scene? Why? Plotting things out to some degree rather than pantsing it does help prevent writing a placeholder character.
February 17, 2015 — 2:59 PM
ghost says:
I think this post kind of sums up the problem. Please note that I don’t mean this as a judgment of you, and as a woman, I’m not angry at the question. But this sums up a problem that I think many writers – male and female – suffer.
You don’t have to have special knowledge to write a character of either gender… you just have to write a human character.
There really isn’t a lot of difference between men and women in the mind and heart. Seriously. Women aren’t motivated by anything different than men – for some its family, for some, honor, some are money-grubbers, and some are workaholics. Some women live in their bodies, and some in their brains… just like men. As many ‘types’ of men that you know (and as many parts of yourself that you use to build your characters), well that’s how many ‘types’ of women there are, too.
Many writers place a ‘female-characters’ gender BEFORE their humanity. When writers create ‘female characters’ (female first) all other characteristics, good and bad, come after their gender… and that’s a problem, because it means that the character begins as an object, a doll. The fact of their gender is THE defining element, not their heart, their past, or their actions. When the gender – male or female – is the defining element, than the character will lack the depth, honor, the struggle and the agency of a full-blown human being.
We rarely define a guy as a ‘male character’. ‘Harry Dresden, a male with a heart of gold’, just sounds weird, while ‘Zoë Wash, the female second-in-command of the ship’ sounds perfectly normal. Why is that? Because culturally, we are taught that women are defined by their gender, while men are defined by their actions. Yet, in fiction, that idea collapses- characters who are defined so narrowly are limited by that definition; no matter how many asses they can kick. (Ironically, the same is true of male characters that are’ male’ first and foremost – god knows I freaking hate the default ‘man’s-man’ in fiction because they are so usually so flat and stale and stupid. They are often so busy being ‘a man’ that they never gain any depth as a character.)
Being a woman isn’t a… plot device. Its a part of a persons identity, sure, but only a part. Just like being male is only one part of your male characters. And, I hope, not the most important part.
Just write good characters. Write characters who want things, actively; who set goals; who wage wars and bid for peace. Write characters who struggle with finding out who they are, what they need; characters that mess up sometimes, and maybe, sometimes get it right. Characters who both rescue, and get rescued, sometimes at the same time. Who fight for what they think is right… even when it scares them. Write characters who learn. Who feel. Who grow. Write Humans. Strong ones, weak ones, awesome ones. And, if some of those humans happen to be female – a definition that is only one small part of all the other things that they are – then you’re doing it right.
sorry for the long post… just thinking out loud, so to speak.
February 17, 2015 — 10:39 PM
Victoria says:
My favorite female character is Luthien from the Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien. Not only is she tough, (she almost literally kicks Sauron’s bum, and rescues her love, Beren, from captivity, and all by singing), she is still lady-like and emotionally strong. She’s basically the female version of Samwise Gamgee. She’s the Elf-maid that gave up immortality that Aragorn sings about in the LOTR movies and books.
February 17, 2015 — 2:58 PM
Heather Wolfe says:
One of my favorites as well.
February 17, 2015 — 7:04 PM
Claire says:
That would be Cordelia Naismith Vorkosigan, brought to us by Lois McMaster Bujold. Ms. Bujold is a character GENIUS.
February 17, 2015 — 2:59 PM
Lee Thomson says:
I agree wholeheartedly and nominate pretty much ALL her women in Miles’ books. All the people; men, women and mixed, that Miles hires, works with and worships are all heroes of their own stories, and intersecting with his insanity.
But yes, Cordelia is my favorite. There is never enough Cordelia.
February 17, 2015 — 7:23 PM
Lian Tanner says:
Agree agree a hundred times agree! 🙂
February 18, 2015 — 4:04 PM
Megan Trennett says:
I’m going to be Uber nerd here and say my absolute favorite kick-start woman in any form of fiction is Dot Matrix from the cartoon “Reboot.” Keeps on keeping on despite her entire world on the verge of literal distruction, having lost the live of her life, her brother and only family, her mentor, her home, basically everything.
February 17, 2015 — 3:23 PM
Henry Martin says:
@Luna – spot on.
@Bruce – I have no idea how long ago was high-school for you, so I cannot gauge how accurately you portray contemporary women. Take a look around – There are more women in industry leadership roles than men. There are women heads of state all around the world. Astronauts, researchers, scientists, combat troops . . . and, on top of that, they give births. Women ARE amazing. Having witnessed two births first hand, I can tell you that there probably isn’t a single guy who would want to go through that.
February 17, 2015 — 4:00 PM
Bruce says:
@ Henry – Graduated in ’95. I know first hand how strong women can be. But how do we write them without sounding too ferocious, too strong? How can we keep that soft side with the strength? Any other good examples of femal roles that you’d reccommend in literature? I grew up on Poe and the L’Morte de Arthur. I am a total romantic at heart. I know the “damsel in distress” has been beaten down enough times that just the thought of using it would ensue cries of “sexist”. Also, I’d like to pick up some modern literary greats – any good choices?
February 17, 2015 — 5:42 PM
tanaudel says:
As a reader, I love it when ‘tropes’ are reversed or avoided without making a big deal out of it. I love people who walk in and do their job well, and I hate reading “well, I can do it as well as the men!” scenes. I think this is because the first is about People Doing Things, while the second is about A Point.
A quietly dressed, unassuming person who calmly and competently heads up major commercial meetings. A dashing, brilliant barrister who hopelessly, serially falls for slender striking young law students. An academic who solves crime while boring people with principals of textual analysis. A sergeant in a desk job who turns out to work in military intelligence and is placed there to keep an eye on a senior officer. A doctor pitted in a battle with the local constabulary about whether the speed limit should apply to emergency callouts.
These were all characters I read recently, whose interest was not because they were female, but because they were competent and decisive.
February 17, 2015 — 9:18 PM
myzania3350 says:
Would love to hear the titles of the books the characters above came from? They sound interesting.
February 22, 2015 — 12:13 AM
Mata says:
I’m thinking in the females in the Avatar universe (the element-bender type, not the blue aliens).
In the first series we have fine examples, starting with Toph, a female strong character (even her name was chosen to sound like tough), that has her emotional flaws and phisical limitations (is blind) but is never ever shown as weak or powerless. Maybe she doesn’t have a direct active role in the final battle (neither have the other characters beside Aang) but plays an important role in the defeat of the Fire’s Nation airships with Sokka and Suki.
And of course we have Korra in the second series. Introduced from the very first episode as a phisical strong female whose decisions and actions determine the plot of the series. But there are also secondary female characters, both strong and tender at the same time, with their own agendas that in one way or the other affect the plot in the end. Lin and Suyin Beifong (daughters of the mentioned Toph) and of course Asami, who at the end becomes Korra’s lover.
And we can’t forget Azula, Kyoshi or Katara.
February 17, 2015 — 4:01 PM
Julzerator says:
Favorite strong women characters?
Periwinkle from Patricia McKillip’s “The Changeling Sea”
February 17, 2015 — 4:19 PM
Grigory Ryzhakov says:
Lisbeth Salander and Jane Eyre. The thing about writing a strong female character is writing a strong character who just happens to be a female
February 17, 2015 — 5:29 PM
Chloe Freeland says:
Kaylee Frye. She doesn’t kick ass, but she’s not a damsel in distress. She’s a woman with depth. She is a gifted engineer, and the boys don’t care about her gender. She likes sex, but she’s not oversexualized. She’s just as comfortable in overalls as she is in a frilly dress. She’s brave and compassionate and friendly and loyal. Thank you Joss Whedon for creating someone real.
February 17, 2015 — 6:51 PM
Dana Goddard (@bansidhewail) says:
I am constantly saying this exact thing–how I’m sick of the current wave of so-called “strong female characters” who are basically men with boobs, i.e., the only “strength” they exhibit is physical. I’m also fed up with the common concept of “strong female character” wherein her primary characteristic is rampant bitchiness. As if arguing pointlessly with everyone around you is a feminine ideal. One of the great female characters in my opinion is Molly Grue from The Last Unicorn. She isn’t shy with her opinions, she stands up for herself as well as others, and she won’t be told what to do, but more importantly, she listens and offers thoughtful advice, encouragement, and criticism as needed. What she does is uniquely feminine.
February 17, 2015 — 6:56 PM
C. A. Bridges says:
Every woman in everything Terry Moore has written and drawn. “Strangers in Paradise” is nearly perfect in that regard, with strengths and flaws of everyone out there in the open and men and women drawn like actual men and women. In one of his early comics Francine is getting ready for a new job and getting dressed, and when I first read it I realized with a start it was the first time I’d ever seen a half-clothed woman in a comic book who’s bra and panties did not match. Moore put real people in his books, all with their own priorities.
Powerful but flawed female characters with agency? I give you Katchoo.
February 17, 2015 — 7:23 PM
mechanteanemone says:
In books:
Susan Calvin (Isaac Asimov).
Lydia Asher, Jenny Waynest (Barbara Hambly).
Anne Shirley (L.M. Montgomery).
Skeen (Jo Clayton).
Morgaine (C.J. Cherryh).
Captain Zamira Drakasha (Scott Lynch).
Motley, Helen Damnation (Rafael Chandler).
Jane and Emily Roland (Naomi Novik).
Mala and Yasmin (Cory Dotorow).
Diane Fallon (Beverly Connor).
Miss Marple (Agatha Christie).
Kitsune, Tomo-e Ame, Chizu (Stan Sakai).
Halo Jones, Robyn “Toybox” Slinger, Wanda “Synaesthesia” Jackson, Sally-Jo “Micro-Maid” Jessell, Irma “Irmageddon” Wornow (Alan Moore).
Jirel of Joiry (C.L. Moore).
Jakita Wagner (Warren Ellis).
Honor Harrington (David Weber).
Tazendra, Aliera, Sethra Lavode (Steven Brust).
Gillian Basking (David Brin).
Zinzi (Lauren Beukes).
Alana, Izabel, Gwendolyn, Klara (Brian Vaughan).
February 17, 2015 — 7:31 PM
mechanteanemone says:
On television:
Susan Ivanova (Babylon 5)
Dana Scully (The X Files)
Kelly Bailey (Misfits)
Alicia Florrick, Kalinda Sharma, Diane Lockhart, Elsbeth Tascioni, Jackie Florrick (The Good Wife)
Virginia Johnson, Margaret Scully (Masters of Sex)
Samantha Carter (Stargate SG-1)
Zoe Washburne, Kaylee Frye (Firefly)
Martha Jones (Doctor Who)
Alex Drake (Ashes to Ashes)
February 17, 2015 — 7:47 PM
MLR says:
I’m currently reading “A Shadow in Summer” by Daniel Abraham and he created Amat Kyaan, an older woman with a cane who kicks zero ass with her feet – she’s on the losing side of several fights. But wow, her mind can kick every ass in the city.
February 17, 2015 — 10:04 PM
tanaudel says:
Maddie and Verity in Elizabeth Wein’s Code Name Verity, one a pilot and the other a spy, whose primary plot-relevant emotional relationship is their friendship, and whose strengths (physical, intellectual, social, emotional) are so terribly tested (a stunning book).
Ruth in Ian Serrailler’s The Silver Sword, who single-handedly drags her younger siblings through a war zone, and then collapses (dramatically and believably) once they are safe.
February 17, 2015 — 10:05 PM
tanaudel says:
Oh, and Harriet Vane, of Dorothy Sayers’ novels, who is rescued against her will, courted against her will, who strives against odds to build an independent, self-respectiving life, whose greatest fear is to give up her independence. And then, when she gambles it, finds the actual test will be how well she can continue to use that strength.
February 17, 2015 — 10:08 PM
Dawn Pier says:
I love the character Kalinda Sharma in The Good Wife for the very fact that she kicks ass AND moves and shakes things up quite a bit. Although feel free to correct me if I’m wrong here. Mary on Downton Abbey is also very much determining her own future despite external pressures. And in literature how about Lady Chatterley? Or am I remembering that wrong too? I’m pretty sure she initiated that love affair, did she not? Oh! And how about Julianne Moore’s Maude in the Big Lebowski?
February 17, 2015 — 11:43 PM
Dawn Pier says:
Wow…that was a lot of non-committal statements. Question marks everywhere. Apparently I need to own my opinion more.
February 17, 2015 — 11:50 PM
rika9 says:
I read this assuming the writer was female. That’s got to be a mix of my internal stereotypes, and your ability to empathize with women as actual people. Well done. (On your part anyway,I win no awards for stereotyping.)
February 18, 2015 — 12:25 AM
Mozette says:
Writing a strong female character is difficult – damned difficult! I should know because I have been trying to put strong female characters into my stories, my books and my novellas for years; without much success.
They seem to come out either as too much of a butch bitch and get laughed off the set of the book, or they’re too feminine and and get laughed off the set of the book for picking up a sword or a gun – both times by the man of the story who wants to keep everything running according to the Boy’s Club ways.
Even in RL, strong women are treated as though they don’t have any original ideas between the ears, should be wearing more make-up, hair spray and going out to buy pretty shoes and join up with their girlfriends for lunch, instead of trying to make it in ‘The Man’s World’, when really, they’re not given much of a chance in either one.
How do I know? I’m from a very long line of strong women who have had to fight tooth and nail to get everything they have. It’s shit, it’s crap and it’s time our characters in our books and stories reflected how the world be, instead of how the world actually is… still stuck in the 1960’s, or worse still, 1940’s.
February 18, 2015 — 12:36 AM
MichelleG says:
Pretty much any female character written by Maggie Stiefvater is a favorite of mine, though I’d say my favorite is Puck/Kate Connolly from the Scorpio Races.
February 18, 2015 — 2:15 AM
ysabet says:
#1 is Lucy-protagonist (as distinguished from Lucy-progenitor, also starring) in the movie Lucy. She starts out as a puppet. But once she hits the metamorphosis, she takes first her own agency, and then everyone else’s. Then she chains it to a car and bashes through the plot while the men run around screaming ineffectually. There is one guy who actually asks “What use am I to you?!” “You’re a reminder.” LOL but mostly she just uses him as a meat shield to slow down the bad guys — who are smart enough to play mah jongg but she still runs rings around them. That’s never going to stop being funny. Best nutcracker movie ever. Also most of the complaints are about the violence. Yeah so? She acts like every macho action hero ever, only she is XX instead of XY. As a bonus, there are two meaningful FF conversations: one with Lucy’s mother, one with her roommate. MOAR, PLZ.
February 18, 2015 — 3:37 AM
blackdragon80 says:
Really enjoyed reading this post! I think some of my favourite women/girls from reading books have to be Phedre and Melisande by Jaqueline Careys in the Kushiel trilogy, and of course Miriam Black in Blackbirds and the subsequent books I’ve read with her as a main character!
February 18, 2015 — 4:36 AM
Chelle says:
How could I forget my beloved Harley Quinn!? http://www.vulture.com/2014/12/harley-quinn-dc-comics-suicide-squad.html?ncid=newsltushpmg00000003
An entire article written for her maniacal self.. Awesome. 😀
February 18, 2015 — 8:22 AM
Standback says:
Major Kira from DS9.
Abigail Nussbaum wrote an absolutely phenomenal essay (http://wrongquestions.blogspot.co.il/2008/02/back-through-wormhole-part-vi-ode-to.html) that opened my eyes to how brilliant, unique, and strong Kira’s character is – and how incredibly rare that is. Score another few points up for Trek.
February 18, 2015 — 10:39 AM