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Cinderella Stereotypes

Good Essays

“Radio, television, film, and the other products of media culture provide materials out of which we forge our very identities; our sense of selfhood; our notion of what it means to be male or female; our sense of class, of ethnicity and race, of nationality, of sexuality; and of "us" and "them”…” (Kellner, 1995)

Douglas Kellner expresses the notion that gender roles and the stereotypes associated with them are sets of societal norms that dictate behaviour which is considered acceptable, desirable and apt based on ones particular sex. These constructs are often depicted in media culture and especially film, which acts as a social comment and offers society the opportunity to reflect on the ways social issues are portrayed and examined.
The …show more content…

The story exemplifies the quintessential rags to riches story where Cinderella undergoes a transformation, this is depicted quite literally in the film when Cinderella’s fairy godmother transforms her ripped and torn pink dress into an opulent blue ball gown (Disney, 1950). The transition in colour of Cinderella’s dress furthermore depicts a change in societal stature as the blue draws on connotations of royalty and wealth. This cosmetic transformation is symbolic of the cultural transformation that society was experiencing post WWII and therefore the public resonated with the story of Cinderella (O’Brien, cited in Hofman, 2006). Hofman (2006, p.27) observes, “Considering the release of the film as a reflection on idealism after WWII, Cinderella made an effort to escape a bad situation and make her dreams come …show more content…

The central event that carries the entire plot of the film is the lead up to a grand ball that has been concocted as a strategy to allow the prince to meet every single lady in the kingdom, where he will ultimately find the one he wishes to marry. This reinforces the idea that marriage is critical. This gender stereotype was enhanced in the making of Cinderella as Walt Disney purposefully altered the original fairy tale in order to enforce certain ideologies that would draw the attention of women and children through adapting the story to a ‘modern’ lifestyle (Frederick, 2009) “…Characters needed to follow societal roles and stereotypes closely. He made them behave as though they were the “perfect women” for society.” (Frederick,

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