very, very good<\/em>. The show is set in a fantasy world in which
combat is a critical part of cultural identity and power, but if
anything the women are more precise and technically proficient at
fighting than the men. There is even an early scene where a
blustering male fighter spars with an expert female warrior,
assuming he\u2019ll have to go easy on her, and she deliberately and
calmly takes him apart. In the \u2018enemy\u2019 family, the sister
has a greater knowledge and tighter focus of their family\u2019s
technique than anyone else.<\/p>\n
Another thing it does well is to show real martial arts, and how
women can be just as effective at them without falling into the
typical trap of only being given the soft and gentle styles. In
this story the arts are learned by tribe, and if either men or
women show talent then they can perform them. So the main young
woman in the group does Tai Chi (thought of as soft by anyone who
hasn\u2019t had to go up against it, seriously, bloody hell) but
all the men of her tribe do too. In fact, she encounters prejudice
from a teacher who won\u2019t train her because he doesn\u2019t
see it as a woman\u2019s role \u2013 so the show certainly
didn\u2019t assign her the style because it sees it as soft and
feminine.<\/p>\n
The other girl in the main group (and I mean girl, I don\u2019t
think she\u2019s a teen yet?) knows the style which is the
heaviest and most unmovable, based on rock. When you have a mixed
group like this the female roles often just happen to result in
\u201cInvisible Woman with passive\/protective powers\u201d.
Healer girlfriend, in other words. Not here – these female
characters are determined, immensely capable in attack, and in
some cases the most ruthless people in the show. The camera
doesn\u2019t cut away from the effects of their rage or violence
either, as we\u2019ve seen a trend recently where women
aren\u2019t shown equally during violent scenes. The fighting is
an extension of their character, even their soul, so is shown in
great detail because it is relevant and part of the
storytelling.<\/p>\n
The series is also very good on race. The \u201cTribes\u201d are
roughly based on Asian countries, with Japan, China and Tibet
being obviously represented. The Water Tribe live at the poles (on
the ice), and are darker skinned than everyone else. This is never
once commented on: they are the Water tribe, of course
they\u2019re the colour they are. While there\u2019s plenty of
tension between the groups, there\u2019s absolutely no racial
hatred. Characters acknowledge that one of the tribes is being
warlike right now, but they know that all four make up the world
and never treat anyone as lesser based on skin colour. Those
planning the long-term subjugation of other tribes are shown to be
dangerously out of control and out of balance.<\/p>\n
(This became a sore point when M Night Shyamalan made a Hollywood
movie of the series and cast
predominantly white actors as the all-Asian characters.<\/a> And a
British-Indian actor as the baddie, who ironically is the palest
person in the cartoon series).<\/p>\n
Most of all I recommend
Avatar: The Last Airbender<\/strong> to everyone because
it\u2019s just so full of joy. The comedy is genuinely funny and
never gets old; the sentiments are exactly what I want kids to
be learning from TV. The characters are deep, flawed, and have
development arcs, the women are not sidelined even though the
cultural and fantasy setting could have made that easy and even
likely. It celebrates establishing yourself but doesn\u2019t
glorify violence. It\u2019s just superb, frequently beautiful
and very admirable.<\/p>\n
I\u2019ve seen quite a lot of the anime series and movies
which are popular in the West. I\u2019d put this up as one of
the best children’s shows I\u2019ve seen in any format,
an anime which holds its own alongside more famous adult fare
such as
Akira<\/strong>,
Ghost in the Shell<\/strong> and
Neon Genesis Evangelion<\/strong> etc.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s critical that we teach equality to our
children from an early age and TV is still the best
medium to reach the most people. I think this is a
series you can choose without hesitation. Look for it
in the post-Christmas sales!<\/p>\n
There’s more good news too: a
sequel series,
The Legend of Korra<\/strong><\/a> is underway. The
Avatar is reincarnated (and can contact their past
incarnations, who are men and women of all the
tribes). This sequel stars the next Avatar to be
born – who is Korra, a teenage girl of the
Water tribe.<\/p>\n