{"id":6639,"date":"2011-07-28T09:00:26","date_gmt":"2011-07-28T08:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6639"},"modified":"2011-07-28T09:00:26","modified_gmt":"2011-07-28T08:00:26","slug":"inspirational-fictional-feminists-she-ra","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/07\/28\/inspirational-fictional-feminists-she-ra\/","title":{"rendered":"Inspirational fictional feminists: She-Ra"},"content":{"rendered":"

I make no apologies. I love She-Ra<\/strong>. Even just saying it makes me feel all empowered (come on, give me some “She Raaaargh!”). It’s like Riot Grrrl<\/a> for pre-teens.<\/p>\n

One of the main joys I had from the show was that it featured an awesome female hero in a world of other awesome women<\/em>. All too often, as a girl, my female heroes were lonely, sore thumbs sticking out of a world populated only by men. Also known as The Smurf Problem<\/a>. My other examples of female heroes were all Smurfs: Princess from the deeply confusing Battle of the Planets<\/strong><\/a>, Teela<\/a> from the He-Man<\/strong> series, Cheetara<\/a> from Thundercats<\/strong> and The Pink Girlie One<\/a> in Transformers<\/strong>. Female fighters were the exception. They were The Girl<\/em>. The pat-on-the-head for female viewers: “there, look, she’s joining in too!” Not so on Etheria.<\/p>\n

\"still<\/a>

To me, my Y Women!<\/p><\/div>\n

Female-heavy shows were a rarity at the time – and are still (sadly) a rarity. But the ones that exist are inspirational.<\/p>\n

Like an animated precursor of Xena<\/strong><\/a> (noted fact: warrior + princess + sword = kickass) She-Ra lives in a world of female fighters, bitches-getting-shit-done, lady-doers and action women.<\/p>\n

Seriously – take a look at all of them (more to the point, take note of the fact that the only bare midriff on display is from Bow<\/a>, one of the few male characters who aren’t boyfriends, brothers or fathers). Nice bit of gender-reversal there, Mattel.<\/p>\n

Oh and did I mention they’re all freedom fighters? Female freedom fighters battling against the Patriarchy<\/del> Evil Horde using epic and non-gender stereotypical super powers such as ass-kicking, laser beams, ice and um… being an intergalactic Space Bee<\/a>. The best bit is that none of them appear to be suffering from Sex Assassin Syndrome<\/a> (SAS). Except for maybe Bow. Who also sings, bless him.<\/p>\n

\"She-Ra<\/a>The full backstory is over here on Off My Bird Chest<\/a>, and some more stuff on Wiki<\/a> which contains a huge amount of very cool She-Ra facts, but my main takeaways (and prime feminist inspiration fodder) as a child were:<\/p>\n