andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2009-05-11 10:39 am

Bechdelenalia

If you have an interest in The Bechdel Test (which a piece of media passes if it contains:
1) At least two women.
2) Who talk to each other
3) About something besides a man
)
then you might be interested in these two blogs:
http://thebechdeltest.blogspot.com/
http://bechdel-test.dreamwidth.org/

It's fascinating how much discussion is about whether a movie just about scrapes by...

(thanks to [livejournal.com profile] purpletigron for pointing me that way)

[identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 09:59 am (UTC)(link)
The real point of the Bechdel Test, of course, is that most media should easily meet these criteria without any special effort.

Obviously, there are some media which naturally won't, for example something which is in the first person from a man, or set in a necessarily all-male environment such as a male prison, or a historically all-male situation.

But generally, media should include a representative mixture of real people, interacting normally for the situation under discussion.

[identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 10:05 am (UTC)(link)
By 'should' I mean, 'in the natural course of things, assuming no other forces are operating' not 'should' as in 'ought to, under compulsion'.

[identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 11:27 am (UTC)(link)
Just so you know, I'm very under the weather at the moment, so I'm struggling to order my thoughts now ... but ...

I think we are mostly agreeing here.

I see the Bechdel Test as black comedy. As you know, real women talk to one another all the time about every subject. But you wouldn't know that from a statistical analysis of mainstream media.

I am not objecting to media which look at the situations where women in reality rarely interact, or where their interactions are necessarily peripheral to the main story.

Female people will be naturally woven into most real circumstances, and can be naturally part of many or most fictional circumstances too. That might be as 50% or so of the people involved, or c. 10% if you're doing a historically accurate portrayal of women astrophysics students etc. That includes action movies, and without necessarily being forced into a Sarah Connor or a Ripley stereotype (much as I love those characters!) or a screaming victim stereotype.

Most of the limits are in the minds of the authors - women as well as men - rather than in the range of real experience, I think.

[identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 12:16 pm (UTC)(link)
In that case, no reason not to make half the dumb jock action heroes female?

[identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 12:41 pm (UTC)(link)
What I meant was, equality in stereotypes.

If the star role stereotypes are randomly assigned male or female sex, that's equal :-)