Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Five Feisty, Feminist, Fictional Heroines We All Wish Were Real
Five Feisty, Feminist, Fictional Heroines We All Wish Were Real National Womens History Month and International Womens Day is a day we honor real women. But sometimes our heroines are the fictional characters of books and movies. Here are five feminist heroines we all love. 1) Mulan While most Disney princesses were swooning over spinning wheels and pining for True Loveâs First Kiss, Mulan was unsheathing her sword, defeating the Hun army, and single-handedly saving China. You donât get much more badass than that. And she was rocking the lob look long before it was declared âthe hairstyle of 2016â. Mulan isnât just born talented, though. In what is probably the single-best movie montage of all time, we see her struggles to become a soldier, battling pain, exhaustion, bullying and even a full-out rejection from her sneering boss: âPack up, go home, youâre through.â Mulan fails over, and over, and over again. Does she ever give up? Not once. Instead she buttresses her resolve, and smashes a challenge everyone declared impossible. She proves not only that women can beat out men at even the most âmasculineâ of tasks, but demonstrates the power of resilience and self-belief. 2) Hermione Granger Letâs be honest, Hermione was the real hero of Harry Potter. She identifies the Basilisk, turns back time to save Sirius, makes the polyjuice potion and organises Dumbledoreâs Army, all while Harry is moping around shouting at people that his scar hurts. Hermione wears her smarts with pride, and shows that being a girl-nerd gets you far. She also donât need no man, refusing to simper after an international sports player even when he takes a shine to her. When sheâs not being smarter than literally everybody else, Hermione is crusading for justice and fairness. Sheâs the only person who bothers to try to free the enslaved house elves (a metaphor for the womenâs suffrage movement, natch) and she refuses to be ashamed of her âmudbloodâ race. A bookworm activist? Inspiring indeed. 3) Lisa Simpson While weâre on the subject of super-smart campaigners with kooky hair⦠Lisa Simpson may only be eight years old, but sheâs got more sass than most people three times her age. When sheâs presented with a misogynistic Malibu Stacy doll which spouts lines such as âdonât ask me, Iâm just a girl!â Lisa doesnât just reject the ideology â" she puts into motion a plan to produce her own line of feminist dolls designed to inspire and empower children everywhere. We should all be like Lisa; confronting the things we dislike with attempts to change it. We have more power than we know; just look at how Lisa uses her beauty pageant win to push for humanitarian causes. 4) Ãowyn Come on, she takes down a freakinâ Nazgul. Enough said. Ãowyn always wanted to win glory in battle, but being part of the Medieval-esq Lord of the Ringâs world, she was pretty much told to âstop thy twattling and get thee back into thy kitchenâ (not an actual Tolkien quote). Ãowyn doesnât believe in letting other people limit her though, so she grabs a horse, dons some armour, and rides off to war anyway. She is promptly confronted by the terrifyingly evil Ringwraith King, who swings a huge sword at her while boasting that âno man can defeat meâ. Instead of letting fear stand in her way, Ãowyn throws off her helmet, swishes her golden locks, and gives the ultimate feminist war-cry: âI am no man.â The moral of the story? Just because other people have failed at something doesnât mean you wonât succeed. Never underestimate anyone. 5) Lisbeth Salander The girl with the dragon tattoo is crazy smart, crazy sassy, and crazy hardcore. Sheâs a genius with computers, mathematics and chess; smashing gender stereotypes with the same ease she hacks into a top-security system. Lisbeth is a complex and imperfect character, who displays the same contradictions and vulnerabilities we all harbour. She shows that our past might make us stronger, but it also leaves scars. True, she is also selfish and occasionally criminal. But she is a crusader against powerful, abusive, and sexist men. She beats them at their own game, torturing her rapist and swindling millions out of a corrupt billionaire. If something needs to be done, she stands up and does it, rather than relying on someone else. Beth Leslie writes careers advice for Inspiring Interns, who specialise in matching candidates to their dream internship. Check out their graduate jobs listings for roles. Image credit.
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