Is your main character the same sex as you?

by Adrian Sroka
24th March 2013

Is your protagonist male or female?

I wonder if most of the main characters in novels are the same sex as the author.

There are examples of famous writers have failed when they have based their novel on the opposite sex.

There are also famous authors who have intelligently avoided the pitfall of writing about the opposite sex.

‘The Professor’ by Charlotte Bronte is based upon her experiences in Brussels, where she was a teacher in 1842. Much of the same subject matter of 'The Professor' was reworked from the perspective of a female student into Brontë's later novel Villette, which attracted MUCH HIGHER critical acclaim.

Jane Austen wrote about men in situations she was most familiar with. In her personal encounters with men. In situations when both men and women were present. But she knew little of what men spoke about in the absence of women.

Austen avoided pitfalls by writing about what she knew.

Replies

I do believe that writing about what you know is all important to making your story credible.

My main characters, with the exception of one short story, are women, but their interaction with the men reflects those reactions I have witnessed or experienced. Some of it has to be guess work unless your story doesn't have any of the opposite sex taking a major part. Mine are romances, so I do throw in men. ôô

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24/03/2013