The Atlantic

Lyanna Mormont and the Slogan Feminism of <em>Game of Thrones</em>

The show has had a complicated relationship with the women in its world. As it looks toward its conclusion, it is trying to simplify things.
Source: HBO

Light spoilers through Season 7, Episode 2 of Game of Thrones.

Jon Snow, newly appointed King of the North, is sharing his strategy—to fight Cersei, to fight the White Walkers, to win the many battles to come—with the assemblage of fighters who have agreed to join him in the effort. “Everyone age 10 to 16 we’ll drill daily with spears, pikes, bow, and arrow,” Jon informs the group. The warriors cheer. They like this plan: Everyone’s in this together, after all. If there’s to be any hope of victory, it’s going to require wide-scale co-operation. And, anyway, “it’s about time we taught these boys of summer how to fight!” Lord Glover bellows.  

But Jon corrects him; Glover has misunderstood. “Not just the boys,” Jon says. Women will be part of the effort, too. “We can’t defend the North,” Jon points out, “if only half the population is fighting.”

It’s in one sense yet another in , a show that has become increasingly fascinated with the minutiae of political decision-making as it winds down, and gears up, to its conclusion. But Jon’s decree also nods to the broader world occupies, a world that is fighting different kinds of wars, and negotiating different kinds of politics. is a line that easily doubles as a slogan. It’s the stuff of hashtags, and memes, and Zazzle-friendly T-shirts.

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