Last year,
I rewatched the first six seasons of Game
of Thrones as a lead-up to season 7, and it was nice to revisit the
episodes of this always-exciting, often-compelling, sometimes-aggravating
show. This time around, I was really
struck watching the female characters in the series. Now, let me say before I get started that I’m
not calling Game of Thrones a show
that has it all together where female representation is concerned. The series has a track record of handling sexual
violence poorly, inclusion of women of color is thin on the ground, and the
show has a habit of using female nudity as set dressing. That said, it also does right by many of its female
characters in various ways, and I’d like to highlight one that jumped out at me
on my rewatch.
In a lot
of fiction featuring strong female characters, there’s a tendency to go the
“not like the other girls” route with a heroine, to hold her up as a woman
who’s exceptional – as in, an exception to the usual. In a way, this is understandable, since
plenty of stories center on those who are atypical/outcasts as well as those
who are special, often at the same time.
But with “not like the other girls” in particular, it carries a gendered
connotation that there’s nothing worthwile to be found in those other girls, and
the heroine is exemplary specifically because she isn’t representative of the rest of her gender. In fact, in the earliest episodes of Game of Thrones, we seem to see this
dynamic play out in the Stark family.
While mother Catelyn and older sister Sansa fit effortlessly into the
notion of what a “proper” lady should be, Arya resists these rules, preferring
swordplay to needlepoint. The idea is
that Sansa especially is frivolous, carrying only about clothes and boys, while
Arya is cool, unlike her sister.
The more
women we meet in Westeros and Essos, however, the more we see how untrue that
is. Again and again, we meet female
characters who chafe under the expectations of what a women is allowed to be,
and the overall picture becomes, not one that depicts at most a few special ones
rising above the rest of her gender, but one that shows pretty much all of them
fighting to be her own person in whatever way that means to her. The badass fighters are the ones who
instantly stand out: in addition to
Arya, there’s Brienne serving in Renly’s Kingsguard and later pledging her
sword to the Starks, Meera serving as her brother’s protector, Ygritte running
with the rest of the Wildling army, Yara becoming her father’s heir (despite
him still having a living son) through her fierce naval strategies, the Sand
Snakes doing their thing in Dorne, and Osha fighting tooth and nail to keep
Bran and Rickon safe. And of course,
while she doesn’t do much physical combat herself, Danaerys is the actual queen
of the badasses, lighting up slave owners with her dragons on her way to take
back the Iron Throne.
Like I
said, those are the most obvious examples:
we’re taught to equate strength with fighting skills, and these women
can throw down something fierce. But we
see strength and independence rippling through the show in other ways. Shireen devouring histories about the
Targareons and their dragons. Margaery
using her astute judge of character to position herself for advantageous
matches. Catelyn being willing to do anything
for the sake of her children. Talisa
forsaking her highborn life to care for wounded soldiers on the
battlefield. Melisandre holding the ear
of monarchs to make her visions become truths.
Olenna being completely over the niceties of court, saying what comes to
mind whenever she feels like it.
Missandei gaining an important place at Danaerys’s side through her
brilliant knowledge of languages. Cersei
being as Machiavellian as any of the scheming men on the show. Little Lyanna doing her house proud.
Even
characters who seem, if you will, the most “like the other girls” have their
own strength, whether it’s Gilly trying to protect her baby, Ros rising in
Littlefinger’s establishment, Shae being discontent to merely be Tyrion’s
whore, or even Myrcella not wanting to leave Dorne at her parents’ behest. And Sansa, who once seemed primed to
represent the unfortunate flipside of the trope, has done a lot to survive all
manner of horrible things. Yes, she’s
been abused, terrorized, and worse (the unfortunate “sexual trauma as character
growth,”) but she’s survived Joffrey and the Lannisters, various shakeups at
King’s Landing, life on the run, and despicable men who feel entitled to her
beauty. In the most recent seasons,
she’s really been discovering her voice and finding ways to assert her power,
and I appreciate that.
So, while
Game of Thrones is far from perfect
when it comes to gender, this is an area where it does excel. There’s no “not like the other girls.” There’s just the girls/women, their society,
and what each of them does to circumvent the restrictions their world tries to
place on them.
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