The Hero’s Journey is inevitable. In order to find yourself you must go through this journey and succeed or you’ll descend into yourself until you dwindle. For example, Lindsey Lohan after Mean Girls, this movie is such a big hit for her everyone considers her this big up and coming actress and then she just flops. She gets addicted to drugs and can’t land a role to save her life. Her journey possibly ended during the diminishment stage which could’ve pushed her into alcohol and drugs to bring her back to her high.…
For the past seventy-eight years, Disney has been creating disney princess movies, a phenomenon that has swept the world, with worldwide gross of up to six hundred million dollars. Little girls from the age of two watch and enjoy these chauvinist movies, spending hundreds on outfits so that they can resemble their most idealized princess. The official disney princess line-up includes Snow White, Cinderella, Aurora, Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Pocahontas, Mulan, Tiana, Rapunzel, and Merida. While a single caucasian girl’s dream is blossoming, dreaming about the multiple princesses she could grow up to be, an african american girl’s is falling to pieces, with only a single idealized role model to chose from. While a child yearns for a prince to sweep…
Parents should be responsible for educating their children with the content of every movie or show they allow to be watched. Everyone watches movies with a different point of view, what adults might think is bad, a kid has no idea because it’s been viewed with a different perspective. In the article, “In Defense of Princess Culture” by Crystal Liechty, the author, who is also a mother of two girls argues that she’s not against her daughters loving princesses or being tomboys as she states in her argument, “If she’s into pirates or animal or ninja spies, I will totally support her in that. And use that culture to teach her the values I want her to learn”. The author explains that whatever her daughters like, she’ll use it as a tool to teach them the appropriate side of anything they are been shown. Educating children at a younger age about what films or movies are displaying is a way to teach them that not everything they see needs to be imitated and they are always supposed to be who they really…
This article talks about a concerned parent who has a son that wanted to dress like a princess for Halloween. She was concerned that people and other children would be judgmental of his choice of costume. The boy, Danny, did not want to dress like any characters most boys would choose, such as Peter Pan. Danny’s mom is not only concerned with the fact that he wanted to dress like a princess, but also that this phase is reaching the rest of his life as well. He likes many aspects that girls are associated with, such as playing with toy ponies. Danny does not have a father to look to for advice because he was killed before Danny was born. Danny was not introduced to the way in which boys are supposed to act and dress like. He had no clue that his choice of outfit was meant for a girl to wear. Danny did not care what other people thought about him and decided to not go with the social standard for boy’s attire. He proudly wore his princess Halloween costume to school. Danny’s mom was happy with the decision she made to let him wear the costume he wanted for Halloween.…
“Cinderella In The Classroom Children’s Responses To Gender” is an article. This article targets parents, those who have children, and who are interested in this topic. The article begins by introducing the topic and the background of Westland’s study. Westland set out to discover if children may be more resistant to fairytales. The study consisted of over 100 boys and girls. The students were asked to draw their favorite character from Snow White, Cinderella, or Sleeping Beauty. The girls stuck to the usual norms and created a beautiful princess. The girls remarked on how they would like to be princesses and be kissed by a prince. Meanwhile, the boys chose to draw a prince. The boys associated the prince to having money, fast cars, and being…
Films that I particularly favor are thrillers. One reason Thrillers become so enjoyable for me, a sense of diversion is created making the viewers more indulge in the movie all the way to the ending. The plots are usually twisted, climatic, suspenseful and intelligence is often use far as the writing perspective to result in an ecliptic viewing of the movie. A really great thriller will usually bring a shock factor by the climax, then the movie will receive a better understanding from the beginning to end. Another genre of films I enjoy are Musicals they are fashionable and express emotions through singing. I am really into lyricism so I enjoy comparing the actual expression of the each character's individual story and the progression…
Stephanie Hanes’ “Little Girls or Little Women? The Disney Princess Effect” first appeared in the Christian Science Monitor in 2011. Hanes aims to convince her audience that little girls are being subjected to the hypersexualization of women. With supporting evidence, strategic organization, and a specific purpose and audience, Hanes is able to produce a convincing argument.…
When reading a story, people tend to identify with the hero. They like to think of themselves as heroes in their own lives and the success of a hero in a story makes them feel better about their chances of success in their own lives. However, a hero is only as great as the obstacle he can overcome. The obstacle can be a natural disaster or even a wild animal but it is a human villain who himself develops and changes as the story unfolds that can be the most challenging, and therefore interesting obstacle to overcome. In fact, it is the villain who makes the story exciting. What is a story without a villain? For example, what would the story of Cinderella be without the ever-present evil of Cinderella’s wicked stepmother and stepsister’s. And…
Remember back when you were three, and you would dress up in gown and place a crown on your head. You would run around and try to accomplish the princess wave like the one you saw Cinderella do at Disneyland. Being a princess is not exactly as you pictured it when you were three. They are still the same but as you grow older you start to understand a princess for what they really are.…
So let me tell you the story of how I got everything I ever wanted. Well not everything I ever wanted, just got away from some goddam people that were insane and got myself a man. Did you know you have a fairy godmother? I had no idea I had one either and she changed my whole damn life around. So let me start from the beginning, not the very beginning though because I have got other goddam things to do in my day besides tell a story.…
Modern day fairy tales function in our society as hidden instructions for morals and behaviors that we teach children. One such fairy tale is Charles Perrault’s classic known as Cinderella or The Little Glass Slipper, which on the surface seems to be a magical story about a young woman who is forced to live as a servant in her own home due to her evil stepmother and stepsisters, but then is ‘rescued’ by her Prince Charming. However, the story tends to perpetuate numerous gender roles and stereotypes, and defines expectations of ‘goodness’ for women. Cinderella is more damaging than valuable to children because the tale reflects rigid cultural expectations of women's behaviors and goals, and reaffirms and reproduces male dominance and female submissiveness through the portrayal of passive, conformist and weak behavior. In effect, this problematic representation then becomes acceptable and desirable for all women.…
“Walt Disney's Cinderella” adapted by Campbell Grant is the retelling of a familiar fairytale. In the fairytale, Cinderella is a plain servant for her stepmother and two stepsisters. With the help of a fairy godmother and some mice, she transforms into a beautiful princess who captures the heart of a young handsome prince. Then when the clock turns midnight, she has to return home and she loses her glass slipper. After the ball, the prince then goes to find the owner of the slipper, which belongs to Cinderella and finds her and they live happily ever.…
In the poem “Cinderella,” Anne Sexton uses sarcasm to say that nobody ever ends up being happy and never has that fairy tale ending that they all want. Sexton wants to show how society is under an illusion that all this is real. She is also saying people cannot just become happy despite their good fortune. Sexton uses sarcasm as a way to entertain and portray her points that she is trying to make. At the beginning of the poem she gives examples of many success stories of the normal rags to riches and tragedy to triumph themes. These stories still don’t guarantee you for having a perfect life or being happy. She does this only to build you up to get you thinking of the normal Cinderella that we all know and love.…
Te test is due in D2L one week from now. For those of you who did not get a pass on the architecture section please go to D2L for instructions.…
One of the most obvious messages Cinderella is portraying to young girls is the idea that in order to have a happy life, one must use her beauty to find love. Even with the help of magic from her fairy god mother, Cinderella is granted the lavish lifestyle of royalty in order to attend Prince Charming’s Ball. She is not given the chance to gain knowledge nor does she have the opportunity to gain freedom, but instead she is forced to find love. Catherine Rose of The Guardian argues the fact that even the hardworking servant is incapable of independence as long as she is searching for love; as proved by the prominent male figure that is seen as the provider of domestic and social position. As long as generations continue to connect Cinderella as a passive individual, conformity beyond the movie itself will begin to dominate the current stereotypes aligned with gender roles in the developmental stages of a child’s life. This type of conformity causes gender roles…