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December 10: middle-aged female protagonists (for [personal profile] transposable_element) [Tumblr crosspost]

We need about ten thousand more of them, yesterday.

I mean, seriously, if middle-aged men can be the protagonists of millions of stories over the years, there is no reason middle-aged women can't also. Adventure stories, mystery stories, college professors having midlife crises and hitting on their student stories, you name it. If it works for a man (except for, you know, prostate cancer etc.), it will work for a woman, goddammit.

I think these stories don't get written because too many people are used to thinking of women as the objects in someone else's story, and since middle-aged women aren't either the beautiful young (innocent?) sex prize, or the grandmother figure (either kindly or wicked), they might as well not exist from a fictional perspective. (Except maybe in contemporary realistic fiction? Which is a genre I don't read -- if it doesn't have an edge of the unfamiliar, either fantastical or historical, I'm not usually interested -- and thus know nothing about. And you get women in their thirties in genre romances -- which I occasionally read even without 'paranormal' elements, because they are undemanding brain candy with guaranteed happy endings -- but not so much in their forties or fifties, at least not as the romantic heroines.) Anyway, there has been an increase in female protagonists in general lately, I think, but they seem to be mostly teens and young women. Which is great! I remember how much of a welcome surprise Alana of Trebond was when I discovered her, and I am happy beyond words that she has lots of company now.

But what I really want is Die Hard with the Bruce Willis and Bonnie Bedelia roles reversed, and maybe a female replacement for the villain and/or the cop as well. I don't think that's so much to ask.

*pause*

I should get to work on that myself, shouldn't I? *grin*

-----

December Talking Meme: All Days

(no subject)

Date: 2014-12-12 08:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] justicevoles.livejournal.com
Well, it's really only noticeable with her niece/surrogate daughter Lucy who's a ten year-old wunderkind hacker when we meet her in the first book, where Kay is newly 40.

As of the last book, Lucy has had time to finish college, join and wash out of the FBI, etc., etc., and Kay is still 46...

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edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
Elizabeth Culmer

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