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Sacrifice In The Little Mermaid By Hans Christian Andersen

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“The Little Mermaid” by Hans Christian Andersen is certainly not a Disney movie. The tale is disturbing the reality that the mermaid and human beings is totally from different world, which the story does not end up with a happy ending. Little Mermaid is not Ariel; instead she sacrifices her freedom, her voice, her family, her body, her identity and even her life to be with the man who does not love her and who treats her as a slave girl. She is not a role model for modern teenagers because she sacrifices her entire life and her dignity for someone does not value her sacrifice. Although her selfless self-sacrificial love may consider as a great behavior to some people, it is not worth for her to give up everything and be with the one who does …show more content…

This is because it is a weapon for them to lure the men. Andersen revels, “Then she cut off the mermaid’s tongue, so that she become dumb, and would never again speak or sing” (8). This shows her naïve behavior, as she believes she can still enchain the prince’s heart without her beautiful voice. Moreover, she has a strong desire of being a human being as the author said, “I would give gladly all the hundreds of years that I have to live, to be a human being only for one day, and to have the hope of knowing the happiness of that glorious world above the stars” (6). This shows her curiosity of being a human being for one day. “Massengale demonstrates convincingly that the young fifteen–year-old protagonist has been strongly influenced by her grandmother. She learns that she must suffer to gain a position in the upper world and that she can never gain an immortal soul” (Zipes 108). However, losing her voice means nothing as she becomes ignorant that she is not able express herself anymore. This is because Warner states“ the Little Mermaid sacrifices her song to no avail- except for the story, which keeps faith with her memory. Her siren song condenses all inherited belief in women’s sexual powers; the Little Mermaid surrenders them when she becomes bifurcated and bleeds, as if once the innocence of childhood has passed, that very sexuality turn against its possessor and makes the young woman

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