preview

Comparing Gender Roles In Grimm's Cinderella And Snow White

Good Essays

Fairy tales are disguised as innocent children’s stories that are magical and include mystic beings, but the authors either intentionally or unintentionally set up gender specific roles within these tales. Parsons argues, “Fairy tales constitute a kind of ‘script’ for acceptable forms of feminine and masculine behavior, and they facilitate the production of such behavior by ‘creating positions” (136). Fairy tales tell their readers what is standard behavior for how we should act based on the gender we have been assigned. Cinderella and Snow White, arguably two of the most famous fairy tales, set up these roles by portraying woman as docile humans who need men to change their social and economic circumstances. In these fairy tales women are …show more content…

The women in these stories, Cinderella and Snow White’s+, only path to advancement is through marriage to wealthy men. Symbols within both of these tales support that these women were objectified and characterized as needy.
In the Brothers Grimm’s version of Cinderella, it opens with the death of a young girl’s mother by illness. It follows with Her father remarrying a horrible woman, who has two daughters of her own. The stepmother and stepsisters are awful to Cinderella and force her to live a life of austerity. Cinderella’s father brings her a branch, which she asked for, upon returning home from business; she plants the branch over her mother’s grave, and it grows into a prosperous and magical tree. Then, the tree along with the help of a beautiful white dove grants all of Cinderella’s wishes. (Add transition) When it is announced that the king is throwing a festival to find the Prince a wife, Cinderella wishes to go, but she is instead burdened with tedious tasks by her stepmother. Her stepmother attempts to prevent …show more content…

Heroines in fairy tales usually go through internal turmoil prior to being elevated in society, “women must suffer, if not be humiliated, before they are rewarded” (Parsons 137). The suffering that is endured by women is usually inflicted by other women, who are intimidated by the heroine’s natural beauty and goodness, in Cinderella’s case. This rivalry usually portrays which ever woman who actually has power in the society as the evil one. In the patriarchal societies that Snow White and Cinderella live in, women are portrayed as hopeless, passive creatures, who look to men for rescue, “Fairy tales in the patriarchal tradition portray women as weak, submissive, dependent, and self-sacrificing, while men are powerful, active, and dominant” (Rowe 137). Both Snow White and Cinderella were born into wealth but due to unforeseen circumstances, they both lose their high position in society. As they are forced into these low positions, Cinderella and Snow White, become complacent with their situations. “The paradox of this acceptance of a condition of worthlessness in the self, along with a conviction of the ultimate worthiness and heroism of one’s role, is part of the terrible appeal of the fairy tale” (Kolbenschlag 3). Neither do anything to become more than a simple domestic home maiden, which is all women are seen as. “Rather than being empowered through sisterhood and community, the heroines in traditional

Get Access