Board Thread:Legitimate Canon Questions/@comment-70.42.157.5-20141005164721/@comment-6383956-20141016030910

If I may disagree with you, LadyX, I'm finding your definition of what makes a female character a "strong female character" really limited. Lydia has gone from utterly clueless and losing her mind to an invaluable member of the team -- and she still manages to hang onto that same attitude that we initially saw as shallow and vapid. Just because a character likes to wear heels, doesn't make them less of a good example of feminism. Neither does an active sex life.

Allison's story arc -- straight up until her death -- was in total defiance of the tropes of the genre. She was the love interest -- and, yes, in the supernatural genre that does often entail joining the fight before the end (rather than being all damsel in distress) but it seldom involves breaking up with the main character and it virtually never involves moving on, as Allison did with Isaac. Allison, yes, went pretty much psycho -- but if you're going to hold that against her as something that keeps her from being a strong character, I'm going to have to point out Derek being manipulated by Peter in S1 and Stiles' whole thing with the nogitsune. In fact, having agency taken from you by supernatural means or simple treachery has happened to all of the main characters at one point or another, it's one of the themes of the show. It doesn't keep her from being a strong female character.