Cinderella, a well-known fairytale, has been passed down through generations. “One of the oldest known literary renderings of the theme is a Chinese version recorded in the 9th century AD.¨ (¨Cinderella.¨ Merriam webster´s encyclopedia of Literature.) The Cinderella fairytale, after being around for centuries, has made a colossal impact on each generation since it’s creation. This ancient Chinese fairytale, despite its multiple variations, follows the same vague plot. “The story of Cinderella follows young Ella whose merchant father remarries following the death of her mother. Eager to support her loving father, she finds herself at the mercy of her jealous and cruel new family.” (“Cinderella.” Disney Movies.)…
However, all who are deemed these qualities are the villainesses of the stories. When the beautiful damsel is placed in distress, it is always the ugly villainess who places her there. Thus, as stated by Grauerholz there becomes an “ association between beauty and goodness and then conversely between ugliness and evil..” (qtd. in Hanafy). When a villainess acts out against the heroine, as seen in the characters of Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty, and the Evil Queen in Snow White, they do not act from any intelligible source of anger but rather from jealousy (mostly stemming from beauty) and pure malice, therefore furthering the reader and/or listeners disdain of powerful women, and instead reinstating one’s compassion, and reliability for the distressed heroine. Furthering dissuading people from connecting with the powerful women of the fairytales are that they always are punished in the end. No fairy tale ends with the villainess winning, she always gets her compuence. However, not all female characters fit between the dichotomies of malicious and good. There are a select few characters, particularly the fairy godmothers and the dwarves of Snow White, whom are portrayed as not only genial, powerful, and wise, but also help guide the heroine on her journey to find her Prince. Without the Fairy…
The movie is still keeping the gender stereotype alive and thriving even in people’s homes. In today’s America, where women are in the vanguard of dignified treatment, respect and equality for women, the gender role in fairy tales especially Cinderella is still the same. As Silima Nanda points out, “Ambitious women in fairy tales are always portrayed as evil from within, ugly and scheming, wielding over other women and men” (Portrayal of Women 246-250). While there has been efforts to rewrite fairy tale like Sleeping Beauty for the screen, Cinderella remains the passive girl with an evil stepfamily. The stepmother is typecast as wicked, cannibalistic and self-conceited because she wants a better life for…
To begin with Cinderella has always been that girl mistreated very poorly but has never give up. Her stepmother begins to show her true colors after her and her father got married. “She employed her in the meanest work of the house” (Perraultt). Cinderella step mother was very mean and only cared about her real daughters in the French story. But in the Chinese story Yeh-Shen real mother died. And her father married someone else and her stepmother did not like Yeh-Shen so she mistreated her and killed Yeh-Shen’s fish which was her only friend she had. “She would also scoured the dishes, tables, etc.…
Snow White’s father knew that she would be very beautiful, and he knew that people might try to take advantage of her. So he taught her math, science, reading, cunning, and bravery. In short, Snow White was beautiful and brilliant. She knew her stepmothers evil plan from the start. She caught glimpses other stepmother’s jealous face staring at her as Snow White brushed her strong, black hair. She heard her stepmother arguing with her odd talking mirror every morning. Snow White expected this. As she sat in her potato sack, she thought of how to get out. When the huntsman released her, she was ready to appeal to the man. As he raised his hatchet, Snow White feigned tears and cried, “No please. Dear huntsman, I know that my stepmother chose you because you are so strong and noble, but please spare me. My mother was the most beautiful woman in the kingdom, and died sadly giving birth to me. She passed her curse of beauty to me. My stepmother fell victim to the curse of jealousy. Please don’t kill me.” Taking a look at the girl’s wondrous face and taking her pleas to heart, the huntsman let her…
In the first three princess movie, feminist elements appear as villains: Snow White’s Evil Queen, Cinderella’s metamorphosis stepmother, Sleeping Beauty’s devil godmother (also may turned into a fire-breathing dragon), that women are either full of desire to rights and policies, or full of jealousy to beauty and wealth, or purely abstract devils. Their unrealistic evil, is another extreme far from princesses’ unrealistic kindness. As what people think of Lilith’s demonization, these female villains are the widespread prejudices from patriarchal society, that whenever women desire power, they turn into devil.…
In “Snow White and Her Wicked Stepmother”, Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar formulate the cycle in which fairy tale women are subjected by the patriarchal society’s imprisonment, then turned against each other so they remain in power and are destined to repeat the cycle. Gilbert and Gubar examine how a sexual reference, like “she pricks her finger, and bleeds”, begins the cycle of the metamorphoses of the mother “into a wicked ‘step’ mother” (Gilbert Gubar 292). The wicked stepmother then tries many times to kill Snow White, through various “female devices” such as tight laces, a comb and an apple (Gilbert Gubar 294). Both women are imprisoned by “transparent enclosures” given to them by men; the Queen is trapped by her mirror, while Snow is trapped by her glass…
The mirror held great representation throughout the poem, she said that the mirror made her feel invincible; all she sees in the mirror is "her sneering face, her wide lips mimicking mine." No matter how pretty the step mother may have been she never acknowledged herself but rather the step daughter. She felt disrespected and less then what the king had promised her. She was a step mother coming into a new family and her insecurities ate at her until it became her. To better understand where she is coming from, I’ll tell you about the Brothers Grimm version of Snow White.…
The Grimm version and the Disney version of Cinderella both include punishment to the stepsisters for how they treated Cinderella and they both exemplify the theme. For example, in both versions, the stepsisters do not get to what they want,which is to marry the prince and for Cinderella not to be happy. The Disney version kept it this way because that is basically the story. If the stepsisters got what they wanted, then they would not have gotten what they deserved and that was the whole lesson of the story. Another example is that in the end, Cinderella does get to marry the prince and she gets what she deserves for how the stepsisters and stepmother treated her. The Disney version also kept this the same because it is the happy ending that everybody is expecting and is, once again, the basic story line. They can change the details of the story compared to the Grimm version, but they needed to keep the outcome the same in order to deliver the theme.…
One similarity that they both share is that they are both ambitious to get what they want. The wicked step mother is ambitious due to many reasons one is that she gains her royal position as queen by marrying a widowed man not for true love just for the title. Another reason to why she is ambitious is that in the story when the step mother asks the mirror which tells answers peoples questions. "Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest of them all?". This time there was a different reply from the mirror to what she is usually use to "You were the fairest, lady Queen. Snow White is fairest now, I ween". This really made the Queen angry because she wanted to be fairest and she envied Snow White beauty and the only option that she took was murder to achieve what she wanted. Comparable to Lady Macbeth for her husband to become king the only route she took was murdering King Duncan.…
The mother figure is an archetype for example. In literature, the mother figure will typically be someone who guides or directs a child. In the stepmother role, this is someone who isn’t very kind to their stepchild. The stepmother is an archetype that we see very frequently, especially in fairy tales. In Enchanted, Giselle is sent to New York by her evil stepmother, Queen Narissa. The stepmother in fairy tales is typically always evil. In Cinderella, she is treated as a slave by her evil stepmother. Or the classic Evil Queen from Snow White. The Evil Queen sends out for somebody to rip out Snow White’s heart. These aren’t exactly “loving” acts, which is why they fit into the stepmother…
At the beginning of the story, Cinderella is the beloved daughter of a wealthy man, leading a happy, normal life. However, as all heroic journeys begin, according to Campbell, so must this one, with "A blunder-apparently the merest chance-reveals an unsuspected world, and the individual is drawn into a relationship with forces that are not rightly understood" (Campbell 42). For Cinderella, the blunder is her father 's untimely death that leaves her under the control of her evil stepmother and stepsisters who, jealous of her beauty, keep her confined to the estate and treat her as a servant.…
In The essay Cinderella: Not So Morally Superior by Elisabeth Panttaja, the author analyzes the classic fairy tale that most of us have grown up knowing of Cinderella. The author’s analysis is a bit abrupt and right to the point, but also cleverly stated. The authors essay is about Cinderella being crafty, and not the normal perception of Cinderella being a princess who is virtuous and patient. It is also described in the essay that Cinderella may not be as motherless as it seems in the classic fairy tale. We think to assume that because she has magical powers looking over her that she is also of hierarchy morally. It is an example of the complexity in what is portrayed as a simple story. A story about good Vs. Evil, and good always overcomes.…
The Brothers Grimm’s, “Ashputtle and D.T. Niane’s “Sundiata”, both have characters who is a villain. Sassouma Berete in “Sundiata” is similar to Ashputtle’s evil stepmother and stepsisters. Both of them bring misery and burden to the main character. In the story of “Ashputtle”, the evil stepmother and stepsisters mocks and insults Ashputtle, also they forced her to do all the household chores. Meanwhile, in the story of “Sundiata”, Sassouma Berete makes fun of Sundiata’s physical difference and jeers at Sogolon. Both of these villains have the same purpose. They want to bring down the main character, so that they can maintain their wealth.…
In the movie "Cinderella," Cinderella is a maid to an evil stepmother and two very heartless and obnoxious stepsisters. The only reason that Cinderella still puts up with their orders is an example of the Behavioral perspective. The Behavioral Perspective puts emphasis on learning by experience with rewards and punishments. She knows that if she does not do the chores, she will be punished or thrown out of the household. She does not have anywhere to go because her mother and father have passed away. Because Cinderella is a genuinely kind human being who wishes to please, she usually does not stick up for herself against the others in the household. She is used to taking on the brunt of the housework and doesn't complain of her unfair and lowly position as maid of her own house.…