First, Samwise is self-sufficient (“competent”). It’s not the typical Robin character that needs to get rescued by Batman as a stupid plot ploy. He has his own skills and carries his own weight. The hero/ine might save/rescue the world, but s/he does not save/rescue this sidekick.
I certainly hope to be at least that competent. I’m an adult; I’ve lived on my own and been financially independent of my parents since I was 17. If anything, it feels like “okay, I’ve got this taking care of myself thing down, can I have a harder challenge?” I’m a freaking ICU nurse, responsible for other people’s lives 12 hours a day.
Second, Samwise is not a little green wo/man working in the background where no-one can see him/her so that it appears as if the hero/ine did everything on his/her own… They are noticed and they do play a visible role.
It doesn’t feel like I would strongly prefer being visible to being in the background. Both have an appeal. There’s skill and satisfaction in knowing that you’re making it look like the hero did everything on their own, too.
I mean, it might be for whose who see everything gender related (ideology has this effect), but not for those who think it shouldn’t matter. The arguments count, not the (gender of the) person who wrote a text.
I think people engage with things they read on multiple levels, not just the explicit arguments, and that includes picking up implicit social norms from context/subtext like “all the pro-hero writers are male, all the pro-sidekick writers are female.” And that’s not even taking into account the fact that my article is apparently fairly in line with Christian writing on the topic of service, and so might end up shared among Christian bloggers–and the various Christian’s sects’ attitudes to gender roles are often not ones I endorse.
I certainly hope to be at least that competent. I’m an adult; I’ve lived on my own and been financially independent of my parents since I was 17. If anything, it feels like “okay, I’ve got this taking care of myself thing down, can I have a harder challenge?” I’m a freaking ICU nurse, responsible for other people’s lives 12 hours a day.
It doesn’t feel like I would strongly prefer being visible to being in the background. Both have an appeal. There’s skill and satisfaction in knowing that you’re making it look like the hero did everything on their own, too.
I think people engage with things they read on multiple levels, not just the explicit arguments, and that includes picking up implicit social norms from context/subtext like “all the pro-hero writers are male, all the pro-sidekick writers are female.” And that’s not even taking into account the fact that my article is apparently fairly in line with Christian writing on the topic of service, and so might end up shared among Christian bloggers–and the various Christian’s sects’ attitudes to gender roles are often not ones I endorse.