guardians_song (
guardians_song) wrote2013-02-28 01:37 pm
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*a bit more passive-aggressiveness, more mild this time*
.Really, what I'm saying applies (with varying degrees) to the entire sex/gender/sexuality equation. A gay man, a woman, a transsexual. All are different and should be written accordingly.
...*shakes head and facepalms*
(I could argue that there are effeminate gay men who behave in a stereotypically-feminine manner and butch women who behave in a stereotypically-masculine manner, and that's not even TOUCHING the "transsexual" part, but... best to just give up at this point before it spirals into a Tumblr-esque gender psychology wank.)
...*shakes head and facepalms*
(I could argue that there are effeminate gay men who behave in a stereotypically-feminine manner and butch women who behave in a stereotypically-masculine manner, and that's not even TOUCHING the "transsexual" part, but... best to just give up at this point before it spirals into a Tumblr-esque gender psychology wank.)
no subject
It's certainly something interesting to talk about. My focus when writing is usually on the character first--sexuality is an aspect of a character, yes, but it's not their WHOLE character. Otherwise they're just a stereotype, and I'm saying this as someone who (at least tries to) write very gender orientation/sexuality-positive work. ...Unless I'm throwing a two-year temper tantrum, but let's disregard that.
that's not even TOUCHING the "transsexual" part
In my very firm opinion, unless you're handing a transgendered/transsexual transition, you should write a transsexual/transgender character as the gender they want to be addressed as. Period. (My OC Candy is actually transgendered herself, and I was once in an RP where France was a FtM transgender, and I have my eye on another prompt where Film Brain is a FtM transgender. Let's not even go into Shakespeare and genderplay in HIS work.)
(no subject)