{"id":12444,"date":"2012-09-26T12:05:57","date_gmt":"2012-09-26T11:05:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=12444"},"modified":"2012-09-26T12:11:53","modified_gmt":"2012-09-26T11:11:53","slug":"hopeless-reimantic-2-that-thing-that-comes-after-love-and-marriage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/09\/26\/hopeless-reimantic-2-that-thing-that-comes-after-love-and-marriage\/","title":{"rendered":"Hopeless Reimantic 2: That Thing That Comes After Love And Marriage"},"content":{"rendered":"
For more about this series on Romance Novel Tropes, read Rei’s
Hopeless Reimantic intro post<\/a> and Part 1: Virginal Heroines<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n
(The author recognises that the phenomenon discussed below is not, in
fact, limited to people who are married and in love. I’ll get to
marriage in romance novels some other time.)<\/p>\n
[TRIGGER WARNING:<\/strong> Discussion of infertility and failed
pregnancies below.]<\/p>\n
[SPOILER WARNING: <\/strong>This piece discusses happenings from the
first and third episodes of the new season of
Doctor Who<\/strong>, as well as containing mild spoilers for
Game Of Thrones<\/strong>.]<\/p>\n
Last time on Hopeless Reimantic<\/strong><\/a> we talked about virginal
heroines, and while I wasn’t totally positive on the
topic, I will give the virginal heroine this: at least most
of the time, she doesn’t stay virginal throughout the
book. That trope has an expiration date, if you will. This
next one is actually significantly more irritating to me
– partly, admittedly, because it’s outside my
experience in a way that I have no particular interest in
remedying, but mainly because even if I didn’t feel
that way I still think I’d find the topic clumsily
handled and often just shoehorned in to make the romance
more…legitimate.<\/p>\n Not everything has to be about
babies, guys. Image by the illustrious Kate Beaton
(http:\/\/www.harkavagrant.com), shirt by
topatoco.<\/p><\/div>\n
That’s right, folks: I’m talking about babies.
Well, in brief. I suppose more accurately (and more
vaguely) what I’m talking about is
parenthood.<\/p>\n
I suppose putting this column in second is kind of
cheating, because it jumps to the end of the standard
romance novel narrative – or, depending on how much
edginess we’re going for, about three-quarters of
the way through – and for that I apologise, but I
promise you that the baby trope is all-pervasive enough
that it’s not going\u00a0 to matter. An Extremely
Standard Romance Novel, you see, goes something like
this:<\/p>\n
The story outlined above is common to a lot of romance
novels (including our old friend from last time, Bought: Destitute Yet Defiant<\/strong><\/a>) but
it is by no means the only sprog-imbued narrative
out there in Romancelandia. Nor is it even the most
baby-heavy. A quick search on Dear Author<\/a> for
“babies” turned up eight pages of hits
and reminded me that Dear Author actually has a tag<\/a> for “secret
baby” plotlines – yes, they exist, and
they’re common enough that they get their own
category on review sites. These stories might start
out with two separated lovers meeting again after
many years – but wait! She has a child! The
fact that it’s
his<\/em> child is blindingly obvious throughout,
but often only revealed at the very end! What
could be more romantic?<\/p>\n
A nicely infuriating example of this trope on my
Kindle is a little tale called Emergency: Wife Lost and Found<\/strong><\/a>
– a Mills&Boon Medical Romance by
Carol Marinelli that, to be fair, I have to
admit was less awful upon revisitation than I
remember it being the first time around.
It’s a reunion tale between two doctors
who met in medical school and married young
because – shockingly – they got
pregnant, but whose marriage then fell apart
upon the loss of the baby.<\/p>\n
The thing is, the book doesn’t
actually deal with any of those issues.
It skates over them briefly, and then
True Love Sex happens, and
Lorna…gets pregnant. Magically.
And by the book’s epilogue, she
has another child on the way, and her
happiness is complete. See, true love
fixed her!<\/p>\n
Secret babies and miracle pregnancies
are not limited to contemporary romance
fiction, either, although it’s
only here that the total absence (or
extremely brief,
give-it-one-sentence-and-handwave-it-away
mentions of) abortion, adoption (either
way!) and foster care are so totally and
thoroughly angering. Historicals often
feature a heroine whose dark secret is
that, for whatever reason, she thinks
she can’t have children but then,
inexplicably, has at least one child by
the end of the book; the widow whose
husband never gave her children, but who
then meets the hero and gets pregnant so
fast you’d think they had some
sort of corresponding velcro
arrangement, is a particularly common
one. Because that is the miracle that
true love can provide.<\/p>\n
True love also, incidentally, provides
the incentive for wanting the kids in
the first place in roughly half of these
cases – there are quite a lot of
cases of heroines (and heroes, to be
fair) for whom a family was always
endgame, but also a depressing number of
heroines who get pregnant, having never
wanted or thought about children before,
and are midway through a totally
justified freakout when they realise
that the baby must be Mr Man’s and
melt into a puddle of warm, maternal goo
and aren’t scared anymore. And
don’t get me started on the
reaction some heroes have to this. I
distinctly remember a book I read a few
months ago – it was called Momentary Marriage<\/strong><\/a>,
one of those “we’ll just
marry for a year or so to help us both
out of a jam that could totally not be
solved any other way!”
storylines – and the hero of our
tale not only makes plans to
impregnate the heroine without her
knowledge so that she’ll stay
with him, but spends about half a page
getting turned on at the idea. If art
does imitate life, there are a lot
more pregnancy fetishists out there
than you’d expect. All I’m
sayin’.<\/p>\n
The thing is, while this trope may
be extremely common in romance
novels – overwhelmingly,
nauseatingly common, even – it
isn’t confined to them.
Remember Asylum of the
Daleks<\/strong><\/a>, the first
episode of the new season of
Doctor Who<\/strong>? That one
that came out a few weeks ago?
Remember Rory and Amy’s
Fifty Seconds Of Conflict, when
he shouts at her for leaving him
and her response is WELL YOU
WANTED CHILDREN AND I
CAN’T HAVE THEM, SO I GAVE
YOU UP RATHER THAN ACTUALLY TRY
TO HAVE A CONVERSATION ABOUT
THIS? Yeah. Because in the UK in
2012, apparently adoption
doesn’t exist, and neither
does speaking to your partner.
Later on<\/a>
in the series we have Mad
Scientist Alien, who looks at
Amy and can immediately tell
that she’s had children
because she is sad and fierce
and caring, as if motherhood is
the only experience that could
confer these characteristics.
Genre-hopping a bit to
Game of Thrones<\/strong>, we
have Daenerys Targaryen, who
becomes a mother to her people
because she’s never
going to have children who
aren’t dragons. (Which I
personally don’t see the
problem with. I would
much<\/em> rather have
dragon-babies than
baby-babies, although I
suppose feeding them would
be something of a
negotiation.) And these are
just the examples I can
think of off the top of my
head.<\/p>\n
I appreciate that a lot of
people do want children. I
appreciate that some would
even go so far as to say
that their children are
the best things in their
lives, and that is valid
and legitimate and
completely worthy of
representation in fiction.
In spite of all that,
though,\u00a0 as you may
be able to tell, I have
extremely little patience
with this trope, and
I’m going to try and
explain why without
sputtering too
incoherently. Bear with me
a moment.<\/p>\n
Okay.<\/p>\n Okay.<\/p>\n
First of all, I have a
huge problem with
motherhood being portrayed
as the only really
worthwhile thing a woman
can aspire to. Motherhood
is worthwhile, and it is
important, and it deserves
to be venerated and
respected. But I object to
the idea that it is the
only<\/em> thing that
is worthwhile and
important and worthy of
veneration and respect.
This elevation to the
exclusion of all other
things is not, as
I’m not the first
person to point out,
extended to fatherhood,
either – a man who
never has children may
well have been doing
other, equally
important, things,
whereas a woman
who’s never had
children is often seen
as an object of either
pity or scorn. <\/p>\n
So far, it seems that
the only
wish-fulfilment medium
aimed specifically at
women overwhelmingly
portrays babies as the
reward a good woman
gets for being a good
person and a good
lover and without
which no other
goodness is really,
truly good. Where does
that leave women who
have real-life style
infertility –
the kind that
isn’t fixed by
falling in lasting
love – or those
who just never had
that wish in the first
place?<\/p>\n
And that brings me to
my next point.
I’d like
everyone to bear in
mind, by the way, that
I say this next part
as a person who
doesn’t actually
like<\/em> children
that much.
I’ve
definitely mellowed
towards them as
I’ve grown
older –
meeting some
actually nice ones
that I wasn’t
forced to hang out
with because I was
presenting female at
the time has helped
– but
I’m not a
particular fan.
They’re okay;
I might want my own
someday, but right
now I’m
leaning towards not.
(That’s right,
Friend Of My
Friend’s
Family Who Wrote Me
That Poem About How
Not Having Kids Is A
Waste Of My Genes
Five Years Ago1<\/a><\/sup>
– the
answer’s
still no.)<\/p>\n
Let’s
review, shall
we? So far this
segment
we’ve
talked about
pregnancy,
secret
pregnancy,
miracle
pregnancy,
infertility,
abortion,
adoption and the
concept of
motherhood.<\/p>\n
What have we not
– really
– talked
about?<\/p>\n
Any actual
babies.<\/p>\n
I do understand
that it can be
difficult to
write about the
children in
child-plotlines
themselves,
especially if
the story in
question is
actually
supposed to be
focused on
relationships
between adults.
But
there’s a
pretty big
difference
between
“this
character is
important but
doesn’t
really do much
beyond eat and
cry and poop, so
I can’t
write too much
about
them” and
“we need
something
important in
this story!
What’s
important to
women? BABIES!
Let’s put
some babies in
here”.
<\/p>\n
I suppose my
overwhelming
thought is that
if it’s so
difficult to
write about
pregnancies or
children in a
well-rounded way
that makes them
more than plot
devices (or Plot
Moppets, as the
good folk over
at Smart Bitches
refer to them)
writers should
maybe think more
carefully about
including a
pregnancy
storyline, and
how to treat it
if they do
decide to put
one in (as, er,
it were). Babies
are the tiny
humans that
shape the future
of our world.
They deserve
more respect
than
that.<\/p>\n
That’s it
for today! Next
time on Hopeless
Reimantic…either
marriage or
playboy heroes,
I haven’t
decided
yet.<\/p>\n
See you
then!<\/p>\n
<\/a>
\n
<\/a>This
is not, to be clear, in itself a storyline I
take issue with. The loss of a child is a
devastating one, and especially to a couple
who married essentially because of the child
(there are some token protests that it would
have happened anyway because they were in
Real True Love, but still) – I can
only imagine the effects of that on their
relationship. It’s no wonder they
divorced, and believeable that their meeting
again after so long would be fraught with
emotional tension (and I don’t wanna
go into the whole thing, but there’s a
lot of emotional tension for their meeting
to be fraught with). And it’s
understandable that some of the tension
between them also comes from Lorna, the
heroine, having since discovered that due to
endometriosis<\/a>
she’s unlikely to carry another
pregnancy to term. I would actually have
been extremely interested in a book that
had<\/em> dealt with those issues –
that explored the characters coming to
term with Lorna’s infertility, and
how that might have changed or
strengthened their relationship.<\/p>\n