Gender Equality In The Battletech Universe
#61
Posted 17 May 2015 - 02:25 PM
But most male characters were also caricatures. They were just meat for mechs and heads of state to sign the orders. So many of them (Victor, Jaime, Grayson, Morgan, Theodore, Phelan...) were paragons. They epitomized warrior virtues and that is why they had more than two page of personal data created on them (and to be fair, more than a little character development). But the game, the way it played and even the RPG, was about mechs. Characters were just created to get better piloting and gunnery skills (and add a little flavor for the rest of us).
The tragedy of BT, to me, is that it has such rich potential and great written source material that was never truly realized in the stories. It could have had so much more depth. The story line was good, don't get me wrong, but it was largely a retelling of world wars and medieval conflicts. I used to picture FASA designers sitting in a living room, skimming through old historical atlases for ideas.
Huns? Mongols? Clans.
Vatican? Crusades? Comstar.
Ten years later: "So, fellas, what do we do next? The crusade [TF Serpent] stopped the invaders."
"Well... let's just start it all over again, but around 70 years in the future. We'll just ruin the story for everyone else because they don't really care what happens, anyway. We'll call it DARK AGE."
And then, in light of the terrorist attacks of 2001, they decide to call the Word of Blake attacks that brought about the dark age the "Jihad". I guess the historical atlas got old and they had to settle for the NY Times instead.
So, all that to say that, you're right, female characters were very poorly represented and had painfully little thought put into them, but then again so did the majority of the other writing. The details (sourcebooks like Objective Raids, Invading Clans, Jumpships and Dropships, etc) were fantastic. They were a very detail-oriented bunch and could flush out the BT universe in a delightful way, but perhaps not the most creative; the story is what was lacking.
#62
Posted 17 May 2015 - 02:34 PM
i don't even know if it is funny or sad
#63
Posted 17 May 2015 - 07:38 PM
Arcade kitty, I'm sorry if the phrase gender equality is threatening to you. Would you feel more comfortable if it were replaced with something else, like "gender inclusiveness", for example?
#64
Posted 17 May 2015 - 07:51 PM
>threatening
serious
'annoying' is a better word
modern feminism is a joke, and when they question 'gender equality' in a series like battletech with its male and female leaders, warriors, khans etc, but they still begin to count percentage of characters of each gender they only prove how much joke they are
btw, i usually hate to state it on a forum like this, i'm a girl too. it doesn't prevent me to dislike feminists
#65
Posted 17 May 2015 - 07:57 PM
#66
Posted 17 May 2015 - 09:19 PM
#67
Posted 17 May 2015 - 09:24 PM
Girls don't play with GI Joes.
Girls don't play MWO tabletop.
ergo
MWO lore isn't going to market to female players because they aren't the target market.
lrn2marketing. It's like saying men are under-represented in makeup commercials. totally different market.
#68
Posted 17 May 2015 - 10:19 PM
I am really disappointed in the response the question is receiving. Reading comprehension, gentlemen (and I use the term lightly), have you learned it?
0Carbon0, on 17 May 2015 - 09:24 PM, said:
"Action Figure" is a marketing term created to make dolls targeted for boys more appealing, and disassociate them with dolls made for girls. Why? Because most of the original target age group found girls to be "gross" and wanted nothing to do with anything which might be considered "for girls". There is a reason the phrase "They're called action figures" is always used with comedic irony.
0Carbon0, on 17 May 2015 - 09:24 PM, said:
An MWO tabletop game does not exist as it is an iteration of a video game series, which itself is derived from a table top game. Should CGL and Topps ever be so foolish as to make such, the rules for "MWO:The Tabletop" would probably be infinitely more convoluted than legacy or current CBT rules. The OP has stated she is a CBT player and I would not be the least bit surprised if she has played the MW RPG game as well.
I think DERP needs a new Community PR Officer unless they like coming off as immature or ignorant. Public relations do require a measure of tact.
Stereotypes are really the ultimate matter under discussion here and do not become any of us. Can we at least try not to live up to them?
Edited by Nathan Foxbane, 17 May 2015 - 10:21 PM.
#69
Posted 17 May 2015 - 11:15 PM
Nathan Foxbane, on 17 May 2015 - 10:19 PM, said:
I think DERP needs a new Community PR Officer unless they like coming off as immature or ignorant. Public relations do require a measure of tact.
lmao, and you think he was chosen because he is a people person? because dealing with inet people is a big deal..
#70
Posted 17 May 2015 - 11:47 PM
Nightmare1, on 17 May 2015 - 10:20 AM, said:
I am not trolling; I am serious. This really isn't that big of a deal unless you choose to make it into one. If the series had been written primarily by women, then we would see the exact opposite; too many female characters and not enough male ones. That's okay because the authors write about what they know. Males authors generally write more to male audiences and with more of a male intention. Females do the same but with respect to their own gender. That's not a bad thing nor is it anything to get upset over. All I'm saying, is that this thread is hyping a problem that really isn't a problem if you take a step back and look at the books from a big picture perspective. If you consider literature genres, trends, culture, and personal behavior, it also makes it less problematic to accept the BT novels as they are. Nowhere in the novels does it indicate that it is anti women. There are many strong female characters in the books. It just happens that the male leads are generally male because the authors are generally male. That's due largely to the fact that an author will write the lead while imagining him/herself as the hero/heroine. That's natural. Complaining about it illustrates a lack of understanding of the writing process and literature, as well as a lack of appreciation for the author's message, hard work, and intent.
Sigh. I'd considered you a nice person and friend up until this point, Nightmare. I guess I still generally do, but you've certainly tarnished that.
Nightmare1, on 17 May 2015 - 01:08 PM, said:
There's two people who get what I'm driving at.
That... that was the same person you quoted twice.
Let's go back to the original proposition:
Faith McCarron, on 14 May 2015 - 03:42 AM, said:
None of that is saying that BT needs to be more serious, or that the men can't be men, or even that it has to be well-written. Just that the OP can't find any good kick-ass heroines in the BT fiction, and would like people to discuss where they are. Some people have responded to that, answering with their opinions on characters who are strong heroines (Joanna, Rhonda Snord, Arianna Winston, Sarah McEvedy, amongst others), or with their opinions on why strong heroines aren't represented.
Then there are a third group of people who seem to think that any of the above is somehow a requirement that men stop bench-pressing, that organisations be forced to legally be made up of a perfect gender split, that women will force their agenda on all of mankind, etc. To that third group of people: this is the only paragraph I'm wasting on you. But I'll put it in italics so you can feel special.
There was a discussion earlier about how the examples Faith mentioned earlier seemed mostly to focus on their flaws, and of course the female characters had flaws, otherwise they wouldn't be interesting characters. While I broadly agree with that proposition, it's the nature of those flaws that is the issue here. Namely, for the most part, the go-to flaws that BT authors have given their female characters fall into one of three categories:
- The character is innocent
- The character is focused on their image
- The character is manipulative and spiteful
Of course, the male characters don't really do much better with their flaws. Most are either anti-authoritarian, self-depreciating, or (yet again) manipulative and spiteful. Fairly stereotypical stuff that mimics a lot of the stereotypes from the '80s. I don't think it's being specifically sexist, just that that's what it wound up subtly being because it didn't try for deeper characters. They rarely reached for characters who were gullible, or suffering addictions, or impetuous, or any of hundreds other possible flaws.
I'll admit I haven't read any of the Dark Age stuff, but a lot of the fiction accompanying Catalyst's newer publications is much better at avoiding cliches and stereotypes. So there's hope for the future.
#71
Posted 17 May 2015 - 11:47 PM
#73
Posted 18 May 2015 - 12:14 AM
#74
Posted 18 May 2015 - 01:42 AM
BattleTech has indeed very superficial characters, the stories are not a great moment of modern novel history.
But when I entered the BT universe, I wondered how much female characters are available here.
When I give names to my mechs, I try to choose famous female pilot names and I read Sarna a lot. And I can find more famous female pilots than men!
When this character, Catalina Steiner, was found, it was easy to find lots of informations about the numerous Steiner females, especially Katrina. Catalina Steiner is a female descendent and like all members from such a family she is surely used to assert her claimes by all available means. Nothing wrong with that... all people with power use their power. I don't think, this is a male or a female problem.
I'm really sure that BT was indeed written by a couple of nerds, for a couple of nerds. I'm really surprised that there are even females!
BattleTech is from the 1980s. Manowar is also a band from the '80s. I guess you can imagine now, what kind of luck we had with these female BT characters.
As a moderator, I strongly recommend to stay close on topic. We don't want any political discussion here and no insults. Some posts are already sailing close to the wind... don't continue with this kind of discussion. It's about BattleTech and their female characters... not feminism. There are lots of other places where you may discuss it. I'm also very sure, Facebook has a group for it. Join them.
Edited by Catalina Steiner, 18 May 2015 - 01:44 AM.
#75
Posted 18 May 2015 - 01:49 AM
#76
Posted 18 May 2015 - 02:02 AM
#77
Posted 18 May 2015 - 02:04 AM
I found this little Gem
#78
Posted 18 May 2015 - 02:08 AM
Let's do it differently. But as for me it doesn't help to part the community into "political correct ones" and the others. Maybe that was not your intention but it's the result of every discussion with this topic.
#79
Posted 18 May 2015 - 03:01 AM
Catalina Steiner, on 18 May 2015 - 02:08 AM, said:
Let's do it differently. But as for me it doesn't help to part the community into "political correct ones" and the others. Maybe that was not your intention but it's the result of every discussion with this topic.
Catalina, I think you'll find Faith has generally been encouraging people to stay on topic. You've summed up her points nicely, though: the 80's were a bad time for the representation of female characters in BattleTech, and we're moving on from that. Some people have even found counterexamples to Faith's original suggestion, bringing forward constructive examples of heroines they like. It's others who have been attempting to hijack the thread with discussion outside BT, to whom Faith has generally replied courteously but which has the unfortunate appearance of making it look like they are engaging in intellectual argument. In future, I take it we can simply ignore these people and you'll be around to moderate them out of the conversation. Thank you.
#80
Posted 18 May 2015 - 03:07 AM
Yes, be sure all political motivated statements will be removed. It doesn't belong here, it never has.
Edited by Catalina Steiner, 18 May 2015 - 03:08 AM.
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