Internet Culture

‘Describe yourself like a male author would’ becomes a hilarious Twitter challenge

This Twitter thread had a lot of great responses.

Photo of Tiffany Kelly

Tiffany Kelly

Man using typewriter with 'new twitter challenge: describe yourself like a male author would' tweet

Taking a screengrab of a section in a book and posting it on Twitter has become a common way to point out problematic sentences in literature. It’s what sparked the Ready Player One backlash. Now people—mainly women—are taking that criticism a step further by writing parodies of how a male author would describe them.

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It all started last week when writer Gwen C. Katz tweeted a cringe-inducing passage from a male author. This is how he wrote from a woman’s perspective: “I sauntered over, certain he noticed me. I’m hard to miss, I’d like to think—a little tall (but not too tall), a nice set of curves if I do say so myself, pants so impossibly tight that if I had had a credit card in my back pocket you could read the expiration date. The rest of my outfit wasn’t that remarkable, just a few old things I had lying around. You know how it is.”

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That’s exactly how all women think, right?? Yeah, not even close. The man in question was apparently trying to prove that men can write from a woman’s perspective in fiction. Katz followed up with a tweet saying that she thinks men “can absolutely write realistic female narrators.” But, clearly, this author needed some feedback from actual women.

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The author’s passage was mocked on Twitter over the weekend. And that’s when Whit Reynolds decided to come up with a Twitter challenge: “describe yourself like a male author would.”

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The tweet went viral as many women wrote funny descriptions of themselves to mimic the way that the male author described his protagonist.

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https://twitter.com/bethanyrutter/status/980731539343527936

https://twitter.com/yesitshanna/status/980594892245102593

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https://twitter.com/jenniferweiner/status/980839958943592450

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Hopefully, the man in question (and other authors) learned from this Twitter thread what not to do when describing a woman in fiction. As writer Kate Leth said in a tweet, don’t be scared about writing female characters, just “treat us like people.”

https://twitter.com/kateleth/status/980835554232221696

 
The Daily Dot