Bramblethorn
Sleep-deprived
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2012
- Posts
- 17,813
It isn't sudden. The popular "mainstream" romance genre pioneered more NC/R filth in the last half-century than the dirtiest minds of Literotica could dream of. I ascribe my own fondness for that kink to a novel from 1987, and it should not be news to anyone, ever, that many romance novels revolve around women falling in love with abusive douches (it's been a core part of the milieu for fucking ever, and to whatever degree Colleen Hoover continues that trend, she's part of a well-worn tradition). What I suspect we're witnessing to the extent (and granting) that there's any change at all is that writers and their audiences are more willing to be frank about these kinks. If in fact that's a thing, I think it is probably a healthier thing than the (always-failed and disastrous) prior attempts to conceal them.
Kink aside, I feel like there are also more stories now that are willing to deal with abuse honestly from the survivor's perspective, rather than just using it as a kick the puppy/fridging device to make the villains bad and give the hero somebody to rescue.
At the moment I'm re-reading a romance where the heroine is somebody who's recently escaped an abusive marriage to the guy who "rescued" her from an abusive apprenticeship to the guy who "rescued" her from an orphanage. The male interest is the archetypal white knight, somebody whose holy calling is rescuing and protecting people, and at first he doesn't understand why she hates being rescued, and can't see how much it meant to her when he knitted her a pair of socks. Part of their romance is figuring out a dynamic that's not "rescuer/damsel in distress".
I'd also say that it's not just intimate-partner abuse where this trope exists. I know several people who've gone no-contact with toxic parents, siblings, and friends - usually after years of trying to stick it out - and most of them seem better off for it. But it's so rare to see that reflected in fiction. Overwhelmingly the message is that you have to hang on to those relationships, no matter how abusive and unequal they might be. A couple of years back I read a Courtney Milan where one of the protagonists eventually realises they're not obliged to reconcile with their abusive family, that it's healthier to let go of somebody who's done them great harm and is unwilling or unable to understand that, and that's not something I'm used to seeing.
There's still plenty of stalking-is-love crap out there, but there's good stuff too.