My Writing Week: Issue 11, Year 5
Hi all,
Each of the three female crew members have their own personalities: the doctor is always cheerful; the communications specialist is very analytical and weary of authority and; the scanning expert does not feel like she fits in.
The nurturing nature of women, I suspect, will decrease in the future. Less nurturing and more male like physical abilities should lead women to behave more like men. Of course there will be exceptions.
I recently read Kim Westwood’s novel, The Courier’s New Bicycle, which is set in a world where nearly everyone is sterile. So the women have no children to nurture. The main character describes herself as transgender. The novel is dominated by female characters, many of whom fill roles that have been traditionally held by men, eg, drug baron, steroid abusing bouncer, and even bicycle courier. I was wondering if the author had made the connection between the women having no children and them behaving like men.
In my novel, none of my female POV characters have children. All of them can match male crew members in physical roles. They are not subservient to men. The ship’s commander and chief engineer are both women. Seven out of the eleven crew members are women. As a result, I am writing the women a lot more like men.
I think in the future that the gender divide will lessen for most of humanity, but of course there will be those who head to the extremes and those who change gender. I think the emotional intelligence of women through nurturing children will be a lot less important, replaced by the emotional intelligence gained through life experience from much longer lives.
I think the gender of a character will become less important in the writing of that character the further into the future a story is set. The non-gender characteristics the writer gives a character will come more to the fore.
What do you think?
A few things I have read lately have had me contemplating the
way females are portrayed in stories set in the future.
In the novel I am currently writing
I tell a story from five different points of view, three of which are female. The
novel is set over 300 years in the future and the three female POV characters
are all highly trained crew members of a starship. One is a doctor, one is a
communications specialist, the third is a scanning /computer expert.Each of the three female crew members have their own personalities: the doctor is always cheerful; the communications specialist is very analytical and weary of authority and; the scanning expert does not feel like she fits in.
When I
think about the future, I imagine a world where genetic engineering is the
norm. Where men and women can be as athletic or cosmetically perfect as they or
their parents want them to be. I am not one to think that genetic engineering
will cost too much and be only for the privileged few. Years ago computers cost
too much and seemed destined only for the privileged few. In my vision of the future
women can be as fast, tall and strong as men, and can compete with men on every
level.
Another
factor influencing the way female characters should be portrayed is the fact
that people will live much longer in the future. Living lives that last
centuries will mean that child rearing will be a much smaller part of a woman’s life.
Instead of raising children for about a quarter of their lives, most females
will spend a much smaller fraction of their lives child rearing. If a woman
lives a thousand years, 18 years spent raising a child is only 1.8% of their
life. The nurturing nature of women, I suspect, will decrease in the future. Less nurturing and more male like physical abilities should lead women to behave more like men. Of course there will be exceptions.
I recently read Kim Westwood’s novel, The Courier’s New Bicycle, which is set in a world where nearly everyone is sterile. So the women have no children to nurture. The main character describes herself as transgender. The novel is dominated by female characters, many of whom fill roles that have been traditionally held by men, eg, drug baron, steroid abusing bouncer, and even bicycle courier. I was wondering if the author had made the connection between the women having no children and them behaving like men.
In my novel, none of my female POV characters have children. All of them can match male crew members in physical roles. They are not subservient to men. The ship’s commander and chief engineer are both women. Seven out of the eleven crew members are women. As a result, I am writing the women a lot more like men.
I think in the future that the gender divide will lessen for most of humanity, but of course there will be those who head to the extremes and those who change gender. I think the emotional intelligence of women through nurturing children will be a lot less important, replaced by the emotional intelligence gained through life experience from much longer lives.
I think the gender of a character will become less important in the writing of that character the further into the future a story is set. The non-gender characteristics the writer gives a character will come more to the fore.
What do you think?
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