maninahat said:
I notice how the cynic in you suggests that these writers are climbing on the bandwagon - that this sounds more plausible than the notion that they honestly believe what these feminists are saying. I see this sort of thing being said a lot in different ways. I've seen readers call the commentators white knights and bleeding hearts, whilst somewhat smarter people have called them out on smugness, or their attempts to impress their peers/to women.
Well, "white knights" and "bleeding hearts" exist, but I'm not saying anything about how common they are, only that I ran into a handful. I'm not calling everyone with a "feminist" stance a "white knight" and all. But I'm more saying, yes, that this seems to be "a thing" lately, and it kicks up dust, generates traffic, so jumping into the middle is practically sound. Some people pull it of well, some pull it off less so.
The thing about that is that once you start speculating about the writer's motive or sincerity, you no longer have to deal with what they are actually saying. An RPS writer may have put forward a long, detailed criticism of female characterisations, which you can easily sidestep by discussing the writer's sincerity, instead of what they wrote.
That actually isn't entirely correct, since it'd be a textbook example of
argumentum ad hominem. In my case it'd mostly mean I'd be inclined to believe I can better discuss the same points with someone else. One's motives do not invalidate their arguments, they might make those arguments a helluvalot more difficult to discuss civilly, however.
Note that I'm not criticizing those people who actually take the time to question the points raised by feminists/writers. I'm more concerned about those who find themselves disagreeing with the writers without showing signs that they even engaged with what they wrote in the first place. This is what I think is happening; there is a general inertia among people to confront an issue that is still largely invisible to them, so it is easier to accuse a feminist of being self-centred or deluded then to lever out of the chair and see things from where they are standing. I hate this argument, and I might as well start calling "sheeple" and inserting Loose Change quotations in my forum signatures. Nevertheless, I think that is what is happening, and that as the more savvy and experienced people within the game industry start to catch on to what these feminists are saying, the more these people are going to have to squirm in their chair and find reasons to ignore these idiot commentators.
Yes, you are on to something here. It's very dependant on how the points are brought across too, I'd think.
For example, my personal dislike for Anita Sarkeesian comes from her (lack of) methodology, lack of credit given to let's players whose footage she used, a few glaring examples of completely misinterpreting characterizations of female characters (Zia didn't even get kidnapped nor did she have to be saved, Lili did, but in Psychonauts
everyone gets kidnapped and needs to be saved) plus that unsubstantiated talk about a link between videogame violence against women and domestic abuse.
On the other hand, we have, for example Gethsemani here on the forums, who's quite a feminist, and I can easily talk things over with her, even if we run into disagreements occasionally, because she's open to discussion, researches her points and all that.
I suspect there's another problem, though, that the writers for entertainment sights might be seen as a bit of an "authority" in some way by the readers, and therefore to be more likely to meet opposition simply because "fight the power, man". I think I'll want to actually dig deeper into this sometime and see if I'm on to anything, or if it's just a red herring.
Then again, perhaps the journalists are over-sensitive, deluded and self-centred. It wouldn't surprise me if that were the case at least some of the time.
Quite, I mean, there are people on both sides of the argument, and people might have all kinds of quirks.