You Go, Gert Yorkes
I’m a simple woman. I don’t need too much encouragement to start a new TV show. So when I heard there was a Hulu original series coming out that features a purple-haired, teenage, Jewish feminist with a pet dinosaur, I decided to watch it. And, I’m so glad I did.
The show is Marvel’s Runaways. The basic premise is that six teenagers, who were previously friends but have drifted apart, come together once more only to discover that their parents’ charity group is actually a group of supervillains. They have to figure out what their parents are doing and how to stop it, while simultaneously learning more about themselves (both in the normal teenager way and in the superpowers way) and juggling their interpersonal relationships. The best part of the show is its ensemble cast made up of well defined, realistic, flawed, and interesting people. The character who initially drew me in is the one who I already mentioned: Gert Yorkes.
As a teenage Jewish feminist, I immediately focused on Gert because we share these traits. It was so exciting for me to see a young, unapologetic, Jewish feminist on screen who isn’t afraid to be defined by her feminism. In the first episode alone, she starts a feminist club, and speaks her mind about things that perpetuate the patriarchy, even when it’s the unpopular opinion. She’s also proud of her Jewish identity, though she does insult her parents’ brisket.
Yet, as they show went on, I was sometimes disappointed by Gert, mostly because her main storyline revolves around her crush on Chase Stein, another one of the Runaways, who appears to have a crush on their friend Karolina. Gert constantly tries to get between Karolina and Chase and is consistently awful to Karolina. Despite her outspoken feminist morals, Gert plays right into the sexist tropes of defining herself based on a relationship with a man, and competing with another woman for that man’s attention.
Beyond that, she’s often framed as the “insufferable social justice warrior,” and she seems to use her feminism to put down things her friends are excited about. For example, when her sister, Molly, is looking forward to dance squad auditions, Gert belittles her for reinforcing gender roles and marginalizing women. The “feminist killjoy” is a common and harmful stereotype. It makes feminists like myself afraid to speak up against sexism because we don’t want to be labeled as crazy or over-sensitive. Making Gert this kind of feminist isn’t actually progressive at all.
Two choice details, and a little bit of contemplation, altered my perspective of Gert. The first detail is Gert’s admission to Chase that she always feels ignored, and that all she wants is for someone to see her. The second was revealed in a short, seemingly throwaway conversation: that Gert has an anxiety disorder. While the fact that she struggles with mental illness doesn’t necessarily excuse her faults, these two facts put together gave me a lot more sympathy for her, and also helped me relate to her more. Gert is multifaceted, just like the rest of us. I too want to end gender inequality and smash the patriarchy, but I also have the impossibly strong, impossibly human desire to be liked. While Gert’s methods are imperfect, they aren’t by any means evil or atypical.
Something else that strikes me as important is that while Gert is sometimes over-the-top about her feminism, even for me, other characters still learn from her. In one episode, Chase quotes her favorite expression, “dates are heteronormative,” and says that while most of the time he doesn’t understand her, she sometimes makes good points. It’s empowering to see a feminist character who actually makes the people around her better feminists. It makes me feel like I can do the same!
I’ve wholeheartedly embraced Gert for who she is: a strong Jewish feminist, who, though flawed, is working to change herself so she can better change the world. In the end, this might be the best, and possibly the most realistic representation I, and other girls like me, could ask for. Gert isn’t perfect, but she is a feminist who wants to make a difference in the world and wants those around her to understand her point of view. In a lot of ways this is what I’m trying to do too, and Gert’s example helps me believe that I can do it.
This piece was written as part of JWA’s Rising Voices Fellowship.
I respectfully disagree. I found Gert to be disrespectful of not only men, but other women, her sister, adult, people with other religions and the like. I eventually began to fast forward through her conversations, or just play a game while she spoke. Her continuous negativity towards everyone around her displayed a very insecure, horribly hypocritical, and judgemental person who has no tolerance for really anyone else. I am older and believe in more traditional roles for myself, but have a very successful sister whose husband was a stay at home dad. I am incredibly proud of her and would never begrudge another woman of her choices. But if we as women and humans in general can't lift each other up, encourage each other, and support each other, then we become part of an entirely different problem. Gert was the weakest personality person of the group, and like you said, they were all flawed as would be expected in any group of people in life.
I've been around people like Gert in real life, and honestly I just cannot stomach their double standards and hypocrisy. There is just nothing admirable about a person who expects everyone to conform to their standards, agree with their every word, attempt to humiliate everyone around them, verbally and emotionally abuse people as acceptable behavior, and avoid looking at their own faults. Gertrude Yorkes was a sad and pathetic bully who made feminist and women in general look bad.
Very cool!
Awesome