Susan Barker: Why We Need Monstrous Women ‹ CrimeReads
Susan Barker: Why We Need Monstrous Women ‹ CrimeReads
Thanks, Elsacat, this was a really interesting read!
As I was going through it, I was reminded of Victoria Smith's Hags—I've been working my way through that book. I'd recommend it if you haven't already picked it up!
Quote:A monstrous woman is not unproblematic. But in the horror genre, where most monsters are male and the female characters tormented victims or plucky, resourceful Final Girls, I’m glad that we have a few. As far as feminism’s concerned, it’s an odd thing to applaud. But perhaps it’s more about what a female monster represents: the explosive rejection of the societal pressures to be uncomplaining and compliant with all the emotional and domestic labour that women are expected to do. A fuck you to being well-liked and attractive, undemanding and self-sacrificing, and conforming to all the other limiting and inhibiting desirable traits. I don’t see a monstrous woman as aspirational in any way. Their toxic behavior and sociopathy aren’t to be emulated. But as much as I recoil when Baby Jane Hudson serves her sister that dead parakeet, or The Ring’s Sadako crawls out of the staticky TV screen towards her latest victim, I recognize that in their monstrousness they are very, very human, and admit a shiver of delight at their gleeful subversion of all we’re told women should be.
Loved this! Especially the final paragraph.
Quote:A monstrous woman is not unproblematic. But in the horror genre, where most monsters are male and the female characters tormented victims or plucky, resourceful Final Girls, I’m glad that we have a few. As far as feminism’s concerned, it’s an odd thing to applaud. But perhaps it’s more about what a female monster represents: the explosive rejection of the societal pressures to be uncomplaining and compliant with all the emotional and domestic labour that women are expected to do. A fuck you to being well-liked and attractive, undemanding and self-sacrificing, and conforming to all the other limiting and inhibiting desirable traits. I don’t see a monstrous woman as aspirational in any way. Their toxic behavior and sociopathy aren’t to be emulated. But as much as I recoil when Baby Jane Hudson serves her sister that dead parakeet, or The Ring’s Sadako crawls out of the staticky TV screen towards her latest victim, I recognize that in their monstrousness they are very, very human, and admit a shiver of delight at their gleeful subversion of all we’re told women should be.
(Feb 5 2025, 4:20 PM)Possum The men because they think I'm stupid enough to think the female villain is a "girlboss" who should be uncritically emulated. The entire internet melted down about women cheering the ending of Midsommar but it's fine for men to think slasher villains are cool/badass.
Quote:And then pushback from women because there seems to be a general distaste for violent or "bad" female characters. As if violence or selfishness or etc are "male-coded" or something so it's wrong to portray female characters with those traits.
Quote:As if violence or selfishness or etc are "male-coded" or something so it's wrong to portray female characters with those traits
Quote:perhaps it’s more about what a female monster represents: the explosive rejection of the societal pressures to be uncomplaining and compliant with all the emotional and domestic labour that women are expected to do. A fuck you to being well-liked and attractive, undemanding and self-sacrificing, and conforming to all the other limiting and inhibiting desirable traits.
My personal Bechdel Test for cartoons is whether female nonhuman characters can exist with 0 gender role signifiers - no eyelashes, no sexualised feminine proportions, no Elsa-face, no monstrous-body-with-sexy-face-on-top. If the author can't view a female creature as a creature first and a female second, like how male characters get treated, that's a problem. And good lord do female monster characters suffer from this. The only exceptions I can think of is giant spider monsters, and even they are often female just because they have eggs to spawn more monsters. Hell, more often they're just spider thorax with a stripperific torso of a sexualised woman on top. Men try to produce actual art and not wank-fodder for each other's dicks, challenge: impossible.
It seems to go all the way to ancient Greece, because I notice the majority of female Greek monsters are humanoid, either straight up human (maybe with accessories) or monsters with an obligatory human face. The only exception I can think of is the Gorgon. Many other cultures don't seem to have that standard.
It's astonishing that men (and sadly women, but the dynamics are different with women, it being self-hate and all) will feminise and straight up sexualise (if love interest) a fucking fish if it's female, and they'll do this even in entertainment meant for little kids! And we all accept it as normal! It's sick!
(Feb 5 2025, 4:20 PM)Possum The men because they think I'm stupid enough to think the female villain is a "girlboss" who should be uncritically emulated. The entire internet melted down about women cheering the ending of Midsommar but it's fine for men to think slasher villains are cool/badass.
Quote:And then pushback from women because there seems to be a general distaste for violent or "bad" female characters. As if violence or selfishness or etc are "male-coded" or something so it's wrong to portray female characters with those traits.
Quote:As if violence or selfishness or etc are "male-coded" or something so it's wrong to portray female characters with those traits
Quote:perhaps it’s more about what a female monster represents: the explosive rejection of the societal pressures to be uncomplaining and compliant with all the emotional and domestic labour that women are expected to do. A fuck you to being well-liked and attractive, undemanding and self-sacrificing, and conforming to all the other limiting and inhibiting desirable traits.
(Feb 13 2025, 7:42 PM)YesYourNigel My personal Bechdel Test for cartoons is whether female nonhuman characters can exist with 0 gender role signifiers - no eyelashes, no sexualised feminine proportions, no Elsa-face, no monstrous-body-with-sexy-face-on-top. If the author can't view a female creature as a creature first and a female second, like how male characters get treated, that's a problem. And good lord do female monster characters suffer from this. The only exceptions I can think of is giant spider monsters, and even they are often female just because they have eggs to spawn more monsters. Hell, more often they're just spider thorax with a stripperific torso of a sexualised woman on top. Men try to produce actual art and not wank-fodder for each other's dicks, challenge: impossible.I kind of have the same "test" when I watch cartoons! Have you managed to find any cartoons that pass the test with humanoid cartoons? 🥲
(Feb 13 2025, 7:42 PM)YesYourNigel My personal Bechdel Test for cartoons is whether female nonhuman characters can exist with 0 gender role signifiers - no eyelashes, no sexualised feminine proportions, no Elsa-face, no monstrous-body-with-sexy-face-on-top. If the author can't view a female creature as a creature first and a female second, like how male characters get treated, that's a problem. And good lord do female monster characters suffer from this. The only exceptions I can think of is giant spider monsters, and even they are often female just because they have eggs to spawn more monsters. Hell, more often they're just spider thorax with a stripperific torso of a sexualised woman on top. Men try to produce actual art and not wank-fodder for each other's dicks, challenge: impossible.I kind of have the same "test" when I watch cartoons! Have you managed to find any cartoons that pass the test with humanoid cartoons? 🥲
For human characters my rule is whether a female character can be ugly or offputting while still being portrayed as cool or fun or likeable or even just relatably human like the male characters are. So for Rick and Morty, I'd need a female Rick. Almost no shows come to mind that succeed at this. Even if the female characters are not sexualised, they need to have somewhat attractive personalities and looks for cartoon standards (be thin, reasonable, competent, manage everyone around them etc.). Marge isn't "sexy" in the same way Jessica Rabbit is, but she's not a stupid irresponsible couch potato either - she'd be an evil b*tch if she was.
I couldn't watch Bojack because I had to stop once they started pushing a love triangle between a fat drunken horse man heralding the show, a dog-man, and an attractive normal woman who has a good head on her shoulders. Fuuuck no. I'm remembering Tuca from Tuca and Bertie (made by the same producer), and even though she is kind of an irresponsible chroncially unemployed bum, she's not a toxic narcissistic insufferable exploitative drain on everyone around her the way Bojack is, and I can't imagine that being the case for a female character in the main role, nor people making long essays about how deep, human and tragic that is.