They aren't the ones complaining...No, but then they also don't get to complain when accused of trivializing or exploiting rape.
They aren't the ones complaining...No, but then they also don't get to complain when accused of trivializing or exploiting rape.
She's a vulnerable girl because she IS a vulnerable girl. Why are people equating character growth and knowledge with strength?
this point is moot. Can you imagine Daenerys being raped now? in season 5? no... she's much too powerful.
well strength may not be the right word, but apathy and detachment would have been a better than crying and whaling in order to get a superficial reaction out of the audience. She's been going through bullshit for 4 seasons now. She's no longer a girl.
Mountains from mole hills until the next episodes air. Most fans of the material are dismissing the disdain, while others are talking themselves into weird circles.I still don't understand the outrage.
I think what I'm gathering from people is that rape, as a plot device, is different than other negative plot devices. I don't ask this sarcastically and I'm not trying to be condescending, but what is it about rape as a plot device that's different than like... Gratuitous murder and torture?
I can't understand how a relatively tame rape scene could cause such an uproar in a series that has a lot of vile shit taking place almost every episode.
It's apparent looking at when she changed her mind about marrying Ramsay from Littlefinger simply saying "avenge them" and her saying "I don't know how" to Littlefinger telling her (lying) to make Ramsay yours that she doesn't have much of a plan. She just went along with what LF told her.
Meanwhile, the experience of writing for a rape victim is far more difficultand, let's face it, most male writers simply aren't properly equipped to write about that. It's about good storytelling.
Are we watching the same season? She's pissed off her slave city and her elite guard champions were murdered. In other words she is plenty vulnerable, even to her own "kin" in the dragons.
I think what I'm gathering from people is that rape, as a plot device, is different than other negative plot devices. I don't ask this sarcastically and I'm not trying to be condescending, but what is it about rape as a plot device that's different than like... Gratuitous murder and torture?
Those are also bad if they don't serve the plot or affect the characters. If some character got tortured or experienced some other major trauma and came out of it the same person and never really mentioned it it would be bad writing too.
Yes, but we don't know what effect this will have on Sansa because it has only just happened in the last two minutes of the last episode. Given that, isn't it hasty to say it shouldn't have been written in?
So it has to do with the fact that there are people alive in real life who've had similar experiences, rather than with murder where, well, the victim is dead? I feel like that can get a bit... Slippery though. There are a lot of terrible things that happen to people, and they don't die, and we sort of take it in stride. Limbs chopped off, family murdered in front of them, financial ruin, severe physical ailments... All things that leave people alive. So I probably am still not quite getting it. You're saying that it's not about better or worse, and I accept that, but it's about different - I just have trouble figuring out what the difference is.I, personally, have as big a problem with the depiction of torture in fiction as I do with rape. (fwiw, I find Zero Dark Thirty to be an appalling, dishonest filmthat's neither here nor there but maybe it helps some people understand where I'm coming from.) I think a show like Mad Men has handled rape very deftly in the past, I think a film like Prisoners has interrogated the question of torture thoroughly and effectively. I don't think anyone's saying "don't do it," they're saying "if you're going to do it, don't half-ass it, don't misrepresent it, etc."
I don't think it's that one is "worse" than the other: they don't exist in a hierarchy of terrible things that can happen to you. Once you get into a conversation of "which is worse, X or Y," that's a reductive conversation where nobody wins. It's that they're different and exist in wildly different contextsand thus, should be handled differently and held to different standards. For example, murder is the easiest violence to write: it offers a finality that is simple. either the victim is alive or they are not. Meanwhile, the experience of writing for a rape victim is far more difficultand, let's face it, most male writers simply aren't properly equipped to write about that. It's about good storytelling. Reducing it to a bullet point within a plot isn't really doing that act or the experience of being a victim justice.
that is a much different vulnerability.
I don't see this as contradiction. It was a conscious decision she made, but at the same time the forceful nature of Ramsey made it very clear that it was rape. She didn't expect him to be this violent and that he would make Theon watch.If she isn't naive and this is a knowing power-play... well, she still did just get raped. If the reading ascribes some level of agency to Sansa's decision making (ie. it was a sacrifice she was willing to make), then it also has to ascribe some level of consent to the scene. She married a psycho: she knew what she was getting into, she deserves it, she asked for it, etc. Was this scene prostitution: a transaction of sex for power? Or was it rape? Because those are two very different thingsand, thus far, everyone seems to be in agreement that it was the latter, not the former.
Yeah, but people aren't upset about bad writing here. People walk around naked with jizz on their face in this show, absolutely unnecessary - but I don't know if necessity is a good metric to apply to a show like this.Those are also bad if they don't serve the plot or affect the characters. If some character got tortured or experienced some other major trauma and came out of it the same person and never really mentioned it it would be bad writing too.
That's funny because they didn't even come close to the wedding night depicted in the book.The fact that they've now repeatedly added sexual violence to a universe that's already full of sexual violence is just gross and inexplicable.
Genuine question, but what do you mean by this?
There are a lot of fundamentally gendered experiences that both sexes write about... Like pregnancy and giving birth. I don't know if we should apply gender and experience qualifications to writers, that seems weird to me.The fear of sexual violence is much more present for women than it is for men. That's not to say that male sexual assault doesn't exist; of course it does and it's underrepresented in media. But, not to get too "down with the patriarchy"-y, Ias a maledon't walk around in fear of being sexually assaulted. It's just not an experience that's present in my psyche, soeven if I could empathize with a sexual assault victim because I have empathy and am a decent human being, I'm still not sure I wold be qualified to write a story about them, to write their experience.
Somewhere in the US, John Irving just had a small heart murmur.The fear of sexual violence is much more present for women than it is for men. That's not to say that male sexual assault doesn't exist; of course it does and it's underrepresented in media. But, not to get too "down with the patriarchy"-y, Ias a maledon't walk around in fear of being sexually assaulted. It's just not an experience that's present in my psyche, soeven if I could empathize with a sexual assault victim because I have empathy and am a decent human being, I'm still not sure I wold be qualified to write a story about them, to write their experience.
If that's your take on the plot then I'd suggest you look into a show with a simpler narrative structure.
Yeah, but people aren't upset about bad writing here. People walk around naked with jizz on their face in this show, absolutely unnecessary - but I don't know if necessity is a good metric to apply to a show like this.
There are a lot of fundamentally gendered experiences that both sexes write about... Like pregnancy and giving birth. I don't know if we should apply gender and experience qualifications to writers, that seems weird to me.
How's about she hasn't grown because she's still able to be easily duped by Littlefinger into agreeing to be raped. Like she had a chance of making Ramsay hers. Like Ramsay could care about her or anybody. Like its a necessary thing to do in order to kill the Boltons when Stannis is on his way already to kill the Boltons. If the Boltons think it looks like they're going to lose, they're likely to just kill their hostages. Falling for Littlefinger's trick into being a victim again shows that she hasn't grown at all.
The fear of sexual violence is much more present for women than it is for men. That's not to say that male sexual assault doesn't exist; of course it does and it's underrepresented in media. But, not to get too "down with the patriarchy"-y, Ias a maledon't walk around in fear of being sexually assaulted. It's just not an experience that's present in my psyche, soeven if I could empathize with a sexual assault victim because I have empathy and am a decent human being, I'm still not sure I wold be qualified to write a story about them, to write their experience.
because it's not about the rape scene... its about how carelessly the showrunners handle Sansa's character development for the sake of Theon's
I agree with your argument that fear of sexual violence is much more present for women than for men. What I disagree with is the idea that understanding the fear of sexual violence allows one to understand the experience of the aftermath of sexual violence. They're very different. Obviously, more women will know this experience than men, sadly, but they're still a small proportion of writers. The majority of writers, of both sexes, have to put themselves in a position of empathy to be able to write about this experience; so I don't think the majority of women are favoured relative to men at this specific area of writing.
You say in that post you're going to talk about two rape scenes that don't happen in the books, and then talk about Danaerys/Khal Drogo. Have you reread AGoT recently? Danaerys is raped. It's not questionable or debatable. I would argue that this is actually portrayed better in the show than the books, where Danaerys suffers a single night, steels herself for the next and becomes dominant, and falls in love with Khal Drogo; rather than in the book, where she is brutalized by Khal Drogo regularly and falls in love with him despite how bad her initial treatment is.
She literally says "yes" in the book on their first night after Drogo hesitates and asks "No?". Yes there are issues because she is 12 in the books, and you can argue that she has no choice in the matter but the consent is there where it wasn't in the show.
Again, I'm not saying they shouldn't write about it. Write whatever you want. I couldn't care less what people write. I'm saying: don't do a shitty job. And if you do a shitty job, people will call you out on it.
People are different! People come from different backgrounds! That's not an argument, that's just fact.
One person's "shitty job" is another person's brilliant storytelling. If GOT focused too heavily on the experience of the women overcoming their rapes, the audience would likely quickly dwindle, and alot of people would consider it a Lifetime drama. The story isn't about women overcoming rape solely. It's mainly about war and politics. If you don't like it, don't watch it. But don't call it shitty storytelling because its not telling the story you want told.
Another good write up IMO
http://www.rawstory.com/2015/05/all...ments-about-rape-on-game-of-thrones-debunked/
Or... if you don't like how the author portrays rape the story, don't watch the show. Just because something isn't presented in a way you like, doesn't mean its shitty. I don't like Sex and The City. Doesn't mean it's a shitty show. It just wasn't made for me.If they don't want to write about rape, then... don't include rape in your story.
Or... if you don't like how the author portrays rape the story, don't watch the show. Just because something isn't presented in a way you like, doesn't mean its shitty. I don't like Sex and The City. Doesn't mean it's a shitty show. It just wasn't made for me.
The story isn't about women overcoming rape solely. It's mainly about war and politics.
Totally agree. And that's why the rape is boring and tasteless. It adds very little to the bigger story of war and politics, while her and Reek's reactions to it would add so much more.
Let's take an extreme example (possibly way too extreme, but it is the first one that came to mind). The reactions of bystanders and rescuers in 9/11 or any other major tragedy is the focus rather than the body parts or corpses or victims. That doesn't mean that those parts or people weren't there or weren't significant. Showing them, however, is tasteless and the more important part is what comes next - the reaction.
Very good write up, and tackles all the stuff people keep throwing up in this thread. Really think I'm done here, cause anything posted in this thread could be easily rebuttaled with this.
I'm not sure what you're arguing here. Are you saying you'd still want the rape to happen, but to happen off-camera or inbetween scenes?
because it's been layered and layered on with pointless rape scenes since then/constant gratuitous female nudity and torture
"but that's how it was!"
Grantland's quote on the subject pretty much sums it up:
"Theres a fine line between exposing the dirty truth of the world and wallowing in it."
and just because you like it doesn't mean it's good. that's hardly a compelling argument in defense of the show.
Totally agree. And that's why the rape is boring and tasteless. It adds very little to the bigger story of war and politics, while her and Reek's reactions to it would add so much more.
Let's take an extreme example (possibly way too extreme, but it is the first one that came to mind). The reactions of bystanders and rescuers in 9/11 or any other major tragedy is the focus rather than the body parts or corpses or victims. That doesn't mean that those parts or people weren't there or weren't significant. Showing them, however, is tasteless and the more important part is what comes next - the reaction.
Once she married Ramsay, the rape was inevitable. The information that it was forced and Reek watched could be conveyed in conversation easily and with a focus on how it will change the relationships.