Ever pick up a book or a script, get to a description of a woman, and immediately go “oh, a man wrote this” because the description is just too sexist or completely anatomically impossible? The Twitter account Men Writing Women has your back, calling out all the grossest descriptions of women they can find in literature and screenplays.
We don’t get real pockets in pants because we have tiny purses in our vaginas!!! #thanksforthat #menwritingwomen (Stuart Woods, Desperate Measures) pic.twitter.com/42tTjv5Cs9
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) July 29, 2019
“HIS SEXUAL PROWESS WAS BEYOND REPROACH AND COMPARISON” oh IS IT?? Is it REALLY beyond reproach??? https://t.co/t0StASjV9g
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 9, 2019
Unsurprisingly, the book’s terrible writing from a “proclaimed” writer does not end here 👀 (THE WEDDING PLOT, Jeffrey Eugenides) pic.twitter.com/KsYpaHdYDI
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 9, 2019
The account points out painfully bad descriptions of women from major books, as evidenced by the tweets above. While there are plenty of men who’ve written excellent female characters, there is an over-abundance of men who write women based on their physical appearance. They sure do love talking about boobs. Seriously. It’s boob central. All boobs, all the time, which is not a great way to establish character, as a woman’s character comes from her actions not her chest.
I didn’t know they made this sound?? (DOING IT, Melvin Bridges) pic.twitter.com/Ymvj472bxr
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 8, 2019
THIS JUST IN: Breasts have thumbs! pic.twitter.com/L8RNO1OGzI
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 8, 2019
Well, my tits have stood up and walked out (COSMOPOLIS, Don DeLillo) pic.twitter.com/0Q8OJZ5Bhy
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 6, 2019
Yeah, it’s not great. The account points out these deeply flawed portrayals of women, including some truly horrifying imagery about women and sex, because women are really only good for sleeping with your male hero, am I right writers? (This is a joke. I feel the need to clarify as sarcasm translates poorly on the Internet.)
What in the blue blazes? (EVEN COWGIRLS GET THE BLUES, Tom Robbins) pic.twitter.com/NtXRFm8Jkv
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 8, 2019
The only sad part about this account is thinking “wow, a man got paid to write that a horse is like a vibrator, or that someone can store a purse in their vagina, or that complimenting a woman by saying she has her mother’s breasts is a good thing.” People talk a lot about how women have to make great art to be taken seriously, and that’s even more disheartening considering how much bad art men have made. These are examples of such bad art. Seriously, imagine thinking these descriptions are good or sexy.
Men Writing Women is a hilarious account, and the person running it does a great job of making sarcastic and humorous commentary on these disheartening posts. But wow, a lot of men really do not know how to write women, huh? I know this might come as a shock, but women are more than their physical beauty or their breasts, and you can describe a female character without sexualizing her. Or talking about her mother’s breasts. It’s possible.
I’ll leave you with a particularly bad piece of writing that highlights the male gaze from known “feminist” Joss Whedon and his terrible, horrible, no good, very bad Wonder Woman script. Men writing women indeed.
Such a difference to read female heroes from the male perspective rather than the female (Wonder Woman as written by Joss Whedon) pic.twitter.com/fB9AAltw2c
— Men Writing Women (@men_write_women) August 8, 2019
(image: Pexels/Twitter)
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Published: Aug 9, 2019 12:25 pm