tencrush: (jackanto subtext)
[personal profile] tencrush
Well, no, I wasn't, but apologies if my last post went a bit rambly and weird. Most you have never seen me rambly and weird, though in fact, dealing with people onna OG has made me go rambly and weird before in the past, but it was always about Rose. Must remind myself not to carry my righteous anger over from there to here, because it make NO sense out of context. Sorry, LOL!

Anyway, I kind of promised to explain what the righteous anger was about, so I'll do that now. As an aside, I AM planning on polling to see how widespread the interpretation of Ianto as just the teaboy/Jack's sextoy is, but it's not even really the fact that it is or isn't widespread that bothers me, it's the fact that the writing has even ALLOWED ROOM for that interpretation to exist that gets on my nerves.

So why does it bother me so much? Well, again, it's a question of characterisation. See, to me, interpreting the relationship as Jack using Ianto as a sextoy has a lot of implications for both characters, and it's why I say I don't think it's doing them any favours. The reason I got angry about it isn't because I'm so hugely defensive about Ianto, it's actually down to a few telling statements, statements that I HAVE heard elsewhere in other contexts, about JACK, not Ianto. And all that comes back to a discussion I've had here and elsewhere a few times, about Jack, and whether or not he is still, at this point in the narrative, the omnisexual slut type that he was perceived to be around the time of The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances. The fact that the relationship between Jack and Ianto is open to the sextoy interpretation, in my mind, also immediately implies that it is possible for viewers to perceive Jack as THE SORT OF GUY WHO WOULD DO THAT. Harrassment, of a subordinate. Because that's what that boils down to. The thing that got me so riled up wasn't the fact that people think Ianto is the sort of guy that would allow himself to be used as a sextoy (I think that's a plausible reading if you view the show in a certain way, and I think, given the fact that Ianto hasn't really had a major storyline since Cyberwoman, barring the Jackanto story itself, it's understandable that some people might view him that way), it was the attitude of the posters in question, and of people I have spoken to elsewhere, of "Oh, that's just the kind of guy Jack is." Because, really? No. If the storytelling has allowed room for the interpretation of Jack, the leading man, as the sort of guy who would use one of his employees for sex, given all the fucked up power dynamics that that implies, then the character of Jack, with regards to his sexual/romantic leanings in any case, has not been properly put to paper.

And that angers me greatly, yeah. Because Jack, in everyone's big grandiose words is supposed to be this whole new kind of hero for the 21st century. Someone with a progressive and liberal attitude towards sex and sexuality. Someone like you and me (I would hope), who doesn't like to label people and thinks everyone should be free to explore whatever facets of life turn them on. Someone who will serve as an example to that small faction of 15-year-old boys who are squicked by teh ghey, and maybe open their minds a bit. And allowing room for people to see Jack as a guy who just puts it about a bit, who comes on to one colleague, is rebuffed and moves on to the next, really FUCKS THAT UP for me. That's why I was angry.

Am I making sense yet or am I still rambling? The hormones haven't worn off yet, I can never quite tell lately.

Date: 2008-05-13 09:54 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Except that in season one it was Owen/Gwen, not really Jack/Gwen at all. Also Rhys/Gwen. I think that they set Jack/Ianto up from the first episode, but clearly it was even more behind the scenes in the first season, and they have chosen to develop both Ianto's character and the relationship. I remember on first viewing Cyberwoman assuming that all the rage between them was due to them shagging. Otherwise a lot of it was way over the top. Plus of course the kiss in that episode. Then the non verbal stuff in Countrycide.

I also remember on first viewing Capt Jack Harkness that I just thought that Jack/Ianto were casual. I don't think they would do that episode now without some kind of angst or repercussion. Even then I thought it was a little cheeky of him, but wondered if something changed after, as they did seem more properly together in End of Days.

Date: 2008-05-13 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nightspring.livejournal.com
Oh god, Captain Jack Harkness. Such a schizophrenic episode in terms of Jack/Ianto. On the one hand, we have Jack saying "I don't have anyone," and on the other hand we have Ianto insisting "I'm not just a teaboy" and "Jack needs me." Any interpretation that Ianto meant that only in a professional sense goes flying out the window by his reaction to Owen's "part-time shag" comment. Oy, this episode is exhibit one for the pov that Jack is just using Ianto for a sextoy. Fortunately, they decided to fix it with, let's see, the tenderness with which Jack kisses Ianto in End of Days, asking Ianto out for a date in KKBB, the speech in TtLM. It actually takes hand-waving away one comment -- Jack's "I don't have anyone" -- for the whole thing to make sense, so... *g*

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