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The Little Mermaid Research Paper

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Women have been struggling for rights and a voice in the community for hundreds of years. Even today women are often not seen on the same level as men. They are often paid less and not taken as seriously in professional environments as men. The Little Mermaid faces this same oppression that women have been facing for centuries. In order to get a pair of legs and be on land with the man she loves, the mermaid must give up her tongue. However, without her voice she is not the women she used to be. She is no longer able to speak to the prince and tell him that she is in fact the one who saved his life. This is symbolic of the lack of voice that women have in communities. It was not until 1919 that women had the ability to vote. Although that …show more content…

The mermaid chooses self-sacrifice and murders herself. Knowing that the wedding of the prince would kill her, “the little mermaid kissed his hand, and felt as if her heart were already broken. His wedding morning would bring death to her, and she would change into the foam of the sea” (Andersen). Although the mermaid wanted more out of her life than to turn into sea foam, she gave it all up for the man she loved. She knew the consequences of her death, but sacrificed her everlasting life. Andersen portrays women as selfless through the mermaid picking the happiness of the prince over her own happiness. She suffered through pain to bring happiness to someone other than herself. The Little Mermaid’s pain is described as, “her tender feet felt as if cut with sharp knives, but she cared not for it; a sharper pang had pierced through her heart. She knew this was the last evening she should ever see the prince, for whom she had forsaken her kindred and her home; she had given up her beautiful voice, and suffered unheard-of pain daily for him, while he knew nothing of it” (Andersen). Although she did not immediately obtain a soul, through her unselfish act, the Little Mermaid became a “spirit of the air”. This gave her the chance to obtain spiritual immortality after all. The quality of …show more content…

This Disney film has been circulating since 1989, but is still relevant in society today. Taking many cultural beliefs of mermaids and Andersen’s short story, Disney created a story about a young mermaid who falls in love with a human. Unlike Andersen’s story, this particular mermaid has a happily ever after with her prince and there is no mention of an afterlife or souls. Ariel, the "little mermaid" in the Disney film, is much more than a fairy tale for little girls; “rather, she is a powerful metaphor for the plight of the ‘Sacred Feminine’ over the last several thousand years of western civilization” (Starbird). Both Andersen and Disney’s version of this tale, shows a young women searching for love and beauty; even though she has to change parts of who she is and loses her voice. When young girls watch these films, they aspire to be like the perfect princess shown. And what this particular princess represents is in line with the mermaid from Andersen’s tale. She symbolizes the lack of voice of women, the need to change oneself, the physical beauty a woman must have and that the source to happiness is marriage. These ideas are being shown to young girls and influencing the way that they think and act, believing they need to hold the same traits as

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