In the Salvation Army's magazine
“Others,” Amanda Merrett has made a case for exclusion of fairy
tales from the curriculum, stating that they postulated the view that
women are objects or that they are only seen as valuable when with a
man.
There are many reasons to challenge
this point of view.
One of Merrett's examples was in
“Beauty And The Beast.” She stated that it “normalizes a
dangerous idea that a man's aggressive behavior can be affectionate.”
That does not begin to be the message of “Beauty And The Beast.”
The true message of the fairy tale is that a woman has been able to
turn a bad person into a good person, which is highly empowering to
women and sees them as not being less than men but in many ways men's
superior. And another message is that a woman can get away from a
powerful man who wants her for an acquisition and is willing to do
nasty things in his aggressive wooing of her. Both messages are
empowering to women.
Somewhat similar is a message in “Peter
Pan.” By kissing Peter Pan, Wendy was able to give him the strength
that he needed to defeat Captain Hook. Once again, the message here
is that women have power – power that men by themselves do not
have.
Another of Merrett's examples was Ariel
giving up her voice in order to be with a prince whom she did not
know. For a symmetry, we have “Cinderella,” in which a prince
chooses for his wife a girl from a humble background whom he knew
nothing about. In both cases a huge risk is taken – one by a woman,
the other by a man. This is, once again, symmetrical, and there is
nothing sexist about it.
“Cinderella” is empowering
especially to women from the rough side of town. It shows a woman who
was degraded at home by her female relatives captivating a prince.
Unfortunately, other females degrading the kinder, prettier girls
appears to be in fashion these days. Which means that stories like
“Cinderella” will be more in demand.
In real life, one of the most
best-selling children's authors of all time was a woman named Beatrix
Potter. She did not become famous through men. She became famous
through her own efforts. And her accomplishment is far greater than
that of women who profane the West's literary tradition without
replacing it with anything of nearly the same quality.
Are there fairy tales with themes that
are misogynistic? In Russia there is “Baba Yaga,” a witch who
lives in the woods and eats children. There is not much of an excuse
for that. However in the fairy tales mentioned we do not see
misogyny. Once again, in many respects the message here is favorable
to women.
To the people who take objection to
West's literary and cultural legacy, I pose a challenge. Create
something of similar quality to the works that you attack. Create
something that compares to “Beauty And The Beast.” For that
matter, create something that compares to works of Shakespeare. And
then you will be a transformative influence instead of a destructive
influence, ushering in something that is better than what it stands
to replace.
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