Sunday, October 28, 2018


Blog 2

Prompt #1

The cultural artifact I decided to choose is yet another cartoon, this time from the popular series created in 2005 “Avatar the last airbender”. This cartoon taught me and a lot of other kid’s important life lessons and was probably one of the best cartoons up to date (just my opinion). Here is a video clip I am so sorry I couldn’t find another one I really don’t know why Pirates of the Caribbean music is playing https://youtu.be/vlj9Qqgs9vA  .Anyways I wanted to focus primarily on a strong independent girl named Katara who in the first episode discovered she had the power to water bend which was a rare thing in her village. Every episode I saw her become increasingly stronger, she decided to leave her village to find a teacher that could help her use her power to the fullest extent. I wanted to focus on episode 18 called, “The Waterbending master”. This episode is interesting because as Katara and her friends arrive she is greeted by people from this village and the water bending master, Master Pakku. Master Pakku from the start already thought of Katara as less of a person because she was a woman and refused to teach her anything when she got there. He had said women with powers cannot fight they are only meant to heal the injured. This right here was an early depiction of trying to create this wall for women where they could not be seen as prestige fighters but only as nurturing individuals. The women that had already lived at the village had complied to this rule because they didn’t know anything outside of the norm. This can be compared to the many women who are silenced in other countries having no voice, who don’t know any better because they aren’t exposed to freedom. Katara challenges this mentality because she doesn’t see anything wrong with women gaining the benefit of learning the skill of fighting. Master Pakku represents sadly, how many men view women as fragile and incapable beings. This mentality is seen a lot throughout the world now as women continue to push through in hopes of being on the same level as men. Katara can be seen as possibly someone who desires equal rights because her strength cannot go unnoticed. Throughout the battle Master Pakku spews many sexist comments at Katara, he had acknowledged that she is a good waterbender but still denies her as a student. In the end he sees his flawed ways of only teaching men the sacred art but sadly it is not an outcome that it is always generated in todays society. I realize on the blog I could’ve gone a bunch of different ways and picked many other videos but instead of seeing women as only sexual beings I wanted to focus on the other stereotype of them being fragile and unable to hold themselves up.

Prompt #2:

1.       I believe the person that created this message was someone who wanted show a young generation how fierce a girl could actually be.

2.       Some creative techniques that were used could be the creators used a cartoon to portray sexism, in a way the youngest of minds could understand it.

3.       The opposite sex often don’t see the mistreatment placed on others if it doesn’t directly affect them.

4.       The values represented correlate with each sex having a multitude of ways of expressing themselves without one weakness determining the entire genders capabilities.

3 comments:

  1. It's been a while since I've watched Avatar and I never got around to finishing it however, I do vaguely recall the scene you brought up. I like the fact that you wrote about a different stereotype of women and the way Katara was portrayed was a great example of it, being that she is the only water bender in her tribe and she goes against the norm of women.
    I never really followed the norms of sitting like a lady, being presentable and all, and to realize that we had some bad ass women to look up to is great.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello Yasmine, I really like that you picked Katara from "Avatar". She was one of my role models when I was growing up because she always took a leadership role in the series and as you mention she never took a no for an answer. But Katara wasn't the only female role on the show that was independent, Toph who was an earthbender was also a leader and even though she was blind she never wanted to be seen as a damsel in distress or a burden to the rest of the characters. Both Katara and Toph are characters that should always be portrayed on kids shows because they represent a strong and independent role model to young girls that are watching.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Yasmine! I love how you chose a children's show as an example. Avatar was one of my favorite shows to watch while I was growing up. I agree that it is important for young kids to understand that women can be leaders and role models as well. I think society often times dismisses children's shows but it teaches kids gender roles from a young age. Thank you for sharing!

    ReplyDelete

Blog #3 I suppose for my last blog post I wanted to continue my reoccurring theme of including cartoons and their strong impact on...