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The Bechdel Test

The Bechdel test is a measure of the representation of women in fictional works, especially film. For a work to pass the Bechdel test it must:

  • feature at least two female characters;
  • who talk to each other;
  • about something other than a man.

See more on Wikipedia.

Data

The script data is scraped from shakespeare.mit.edu/romeo_juliet/full.html, and processed into CSV format. The processing code can be found in the R/scrape_data.R file.

Implementation

Definition of female characters

The female characters in Romeo and Juliet are Lady Capulet, Lady Montague, Juliet, Nurse, and Rosaline. Note that Rosaline is a non-speaking character.

Some versions of the Bechdel test require that female characters be named female characters. This implementation does not make that requirement and so Nurse is included as a female character.

Definition of a conversation

Two female characters are considered to be having a conversation if they have consecutive lines. There are limitations of this approach as two female characters may both be responding to a man and not each other.

Definitions of talking about something other than a man

The conversation between two female characters is considered to not be about a man if it does not contain any of the male names, or the words he, him, his, or he's.

Warning

The implementation of the third test is currently a work-in-progress. Currently if any individual line doesn't contain a mention of a man, it is considered a pass. This means the current pass rate is inflated.

Results

Overall Bechdel Test

Individual Bechdel Test Elements

About

Implementing the Bechdel Test for Romeo and Juliet.

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