On Twitter, Kate asked, "[W]hat obligations, if any, do romance novelists have to women's rights & feminism?" Aussie romance and erotica author, Keziah Hill, answered, "None, in the same way no novelist has an obligation to any social movement. However, novelists have to be prepared for readers to vote with their feet if idiots re social concerns." Hill followed this up with the statement that there is "nothing inherently feminist about romance".
The view that romance is inherently feminist is propounded by supporters of the genre; they regard the fact that romance is the one genre overwhelmingly written "for women, by women" as "proof" of its feminism. Yet, as Hill and others point out, the genre consistently fails to engage with issues of vital importance to many women, including, according to Hill, such issues as "Reproductive rights, the consequences of heterosexual hegemony" and the "power struggle with men over childcare and housework". Tweeter and blogger Kat (aka @BookThingo) remarked that the latter problem is often overcome in romance narrratives by having a hero rich enough to afford a housekeeper. Kat's comment was no doubt intended to be facetious, but what she says is right: wealth does equate with freedom from drudgery for many romance heroines, and love "earns" this freedom. That's the thing about romance: it's fantasy; it's aspirational, rather than realistic. If it's going to be taken seriously, it has to be on other terms. But what other terms?
In what sense, if any, can it be considered "feminist"?
This question needs to be asked of romance precisely because the genre is so popular and written largely for woman and by women. It needs to be asked because the diversity of women's writing is often elided by its detractors, with few distinctions being made among different genres such as "romance", "chick lit" and "women's fiction", let alone more serious or ambitious writing by women. Writing by women is regarded (and often dismissed) as lightweight, domestic, focused on relationships, courtship, marriage and children. In addition, romance is particularly derided for supporting outdated and stereotypical gender roles. But as Sarah Wendell of Smart Bitches Trashy Books blog was quick to point out in the Twitter conversation with Keziah Hill, examples can be found of romance writing which both support and subvert the hegemony [of patriarchy]. Romance now has many subgenres and reflects many different values. So why is it still so easily dismissed?
Caught up in this debate is the question of "popularity" versus "literary merit". One persistent assumption has been that romance is cheap and nasty, mass-produced and lacking in literary merit, as well as likely to propound pernicious reactionary values. Its popularity among women readers and writers is not deemed sufficient for it to merit serious attention. As Helen of AlltheNewsthatMatters blog asked rhetorically recently of pornography, "How do we judge the worthiness of a particular form of popular culture? Is the entertainment legitimate just because consumers are buying?"
Fans of the genre are likely to counter this view with the claim that there are many examples of fine writing within the bounds of the genre, merit reflected in the awards regularly given out by associations such as Romance Writers of Australia and the Australian Romance Readers Association. So is there something else about romance that irks people?
Recently on the AWW blog, feminist publisher Susan Hawthorne discussed books "that make you think" and asked, "What else is writing about?" For many champions of romance, this question is key. For these readers and writers, romance is about the body, about emotions, about the visceral response of women's lived experience of love, lust and longing for connection. This is the aspect of romance which is dismissed.
But, if they're right, why? In what way are visceral depictions of women's bodies and emotions anathema to literary merit?
Today's guest blogger, award-winning fantasy author Louise Cusack, doesn't offer answers, but her post does draw our attention to the questions.
Louise Cusack writes: "In defence of books written by women for women"
The first time I heard Nicholas Sparks (The Notebook, Nights in Rodanthe) described as a ‘romance genre writer’ I couldn’t help a quiver of “Damn right he is!” I’d been sick of hearing about male authors writing love stories while female authors were said to have written romances, the inference being clear: love stories were important and life altering and powerful, while romances were more often described as frivolous and clichéd.
Maybe this isn’t my argument to weigh into. I am a published fantasy author after
all – different genre – but I started my career trying to write romance and
have stayed a member of Romance Writers of Australia for two decades. I have a lot of friends there, some of
whom are Harlequin Mills & Boon authors. Thankfully the days of being slighted for writing “those
silly little books” seems to be passing, which is just as well. Romance Writers of America say on their
website “More than a quarter of all books sold are romance. $1.36 billion in
sales each year,” so I imagine those authors are laughing all the way to the
bank, and caring less what their novels are categorised as by reviewers and
critics. Especially as the huge
number of eReaders being purchased has created even more sales for romance
publishers, with fans happily downloading novels so they don’t have to feel
embarrassed about reading them on the train.
And there’s another problem. I take issue with the fact that a woman should feel
embarrassed to be seen reading a romance novel when no one blinks at a man
reading a western or a crime thriller. What is it about women’s fiction that
makes it less in the eyes of the
literati, when as a genre it sells so much more?
Let me take you back a few years. When I first started writing in the
nineties I attended a “meet the authors” evening in Brisbane, hosted by the
Queensland Writers Centre. One of
the speakers was an International best selling Mills & Boon author from the
Gold Coast who’d written over thirty novels and had print runs in the hundreds
of thousands, translated into several languages. The other was a well respected Brisbane author of literary
fiction whom I later found out had been given a print run of 500, many of which
were still sitting in her garage.
That evening had a profound impact on me. I’d grown up wanting to be a novelist, but I hadn’t given genre
a thought. That night I did
think. I realised I could either
try for the approval of a marginal elite, which might get me into ‘the club’
and make awards and literary grants more likely. Or I could write what I was convinced a great number of
readers would love, and earn a living that way. Of course there was no guarantee that I’d be good enough to
get published in any form, but “commercial fiction” as my agent was later to
call it, became my holy grail.




Louise Cusack is an International award winning fantasy author whose best-selling Shadow through Time trilogy with Simon & Schuster Australia was selected by the Doubleday Book Club as their ‘Editors Choice’. These novels have now been released as eBooks by Momentum Books.