QuentinGeorge
Legend
They basically repackaged fantasy as "Young Adult" and that seems to have worked in attracting more women, even when the stories are pretty much the same as ever (and YA is a fairly ludicrous category anyway.)
Well, I'm not really sure you can say "the stories are the same as ever". That's certainly not true in YA fiction.
For one, you actually have female protagonists. Something Fantasy and certainly the pulps lacked until after the 80's. Never minding that that most pulps read like Nazi fan fiction. While writers like Lovecraft rightfully get criticised for their blatant bigotry and racism, it's not like the hobby exactly covered itself in glory for a VERY long time.
Young women didn't read fantasy in the 70's? Shocking!!
And, if you really don't believe how bad things were, just ask yourself why we know the best selling author of all time by her initials and not the fact that she is a woman. And she was writing in the 90's.
YA fiction has been changed considerably since the release of Harry Potter.
HahahahahahahahahahahaBecause those were the majority types that had read the pulps, the dime novels, and the latter speculative fiction market deriving from these and that eventually drove a detour to such via the advent of RPGs? Umm. Could be...
Yep. Women in the 60s and 70s were much more likely to keep their fandoms to themselves, because of toxic male fandom, but that’s about it.I think the idea that there was a paucity of female speculative fiction readers in the 80s or later... to fit in the category of "extraordinary assertions require extraordinary evidence".
I will accept that the wargaming root was male-dominated. But I don't buy that for fiction readership.
It would be, if the idea that women weren’t into pulps and fantasy and Star Trek wasn’t complete and absolute nonsense.Chicken and Egg problem, though, isn't it?
You answered this potential problem yourself.It would be, if the idea that women weren’t into pulps and fantasy and Star Trek wasn’t complete and absolute nonsense.
Women in the 60s and 70s were much more likely to keep their fandoms to themselves, because of toxic male fandom
I have no idea what you’re trying to say here. I didn’t raise a potential problem.You answered this potential problem yourself.
It would be, if the idea that women weren’t into pulps and fantasy and Star Trek wasn’t complete and absolute nonsense.
Yes. Literally everyone. Yes really @Hussar . My quote never says its not cheesecake. In my quote im clearly calling into question people who dismissively say its just cheesecake. You wasted a lot of time typing that."LITERALLY everyone"? Really?
Huh. Looks to me like not "everyone" appears to have agreed that this was cheesecake from the very beginning.
To be honest, I have no idea what you're trying to say either. To me, it seems like you're trying to deny that there were problems with art, stories, etc. because there was potentially female fans of them.I have no idea what you’re trying to say here. I didn’t raise a potential problem.![]()
Hahahahahahahahahahaha
Yep. Women in the 60s and 70s were much more likely to keep their fandoms to themselves, because of toxic male fandom, but that’s about it.
It would be, if the idea that women weren’t into pulps and fantasy and Star Trek wasn’t complete and absolute nonsense.