ONTD

11:26 pm - 12/26/2012

Top 10 Childhood Fictional Females



Chloe Finch, Alligator Blogger

Something about being back home for the holidays always causes me to regress. After setting aside 48 hours to hibernate and stuffing myself with as much homemade food as possible, I plan to spend the rest of break watching my old movies and reading my old books in my bedroom, which is still has painted-purple walls and my life-sized cardboard cutout of John Mayer.

Here are a few childhood heroines I’ll be revisiting.





5. Sailor Moon of “Sailor Moon S” (English adaptation)

The “Sailor Moon S” cartoon series, adapted from a Japanese manga series, never loses its appeal. Sailor Moon is a complex (but flawed) individual, again embodying traits of third-wave feminism. As the theme song states, she spends her adolescence “fighting evil by moonlight, winning love by daylight.” She is suddenly saddled with the responsibility of defending the universe as a teen, and during the day she deals with crushes, bullies, her best friends and body issues. But as her alter ego, Sailor Moon, she fights villains with confidence, poise and sass.

4. Princess Leia of the original “Star Wars” trilogy

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away . . . Princess Leia was kicking ass and taking names, all while rocking the unforgettable cinnamon-bun hairstyle.

3. Daria Morgendorffer of “Daria”

When “Daria” was finally added to Netflix, I was ecstatic. She was the portrait of sanity in an insane family living in an insane middle-class suburb. “Daria” will live forever as the misanthropic hero of my adolescence.

2. Enid and Rebecca of the graphic novel “Ghost World”

Enid and Rebecca share some of Daria’s cynical qualities but do so on a much deeper, more complex level. The girls, both high-school graduates, wander around an unnamed American town, mocking their peers and criticizing pop culture.

As the novel progresses, a tension forms between the women as they begin to reach adulthood. Enid plans to move away to go to college, while Rebecca will stay in town to pursue a relationship with her and Enid’s mutual friend Josh.

Another example of anti-heroes, Daniel Clowes captures a female friendship built on more than Disney-channel trivialities.

1. Buffy of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”

No question, Buffy is a feminist’s feminist. Buffy fights demons and triumphs over evil because of her femininity — not in spite of it.






more @ the Source



Who were your fictional heroes growing up ONTD?

brucelynn 27th-Dec-2012 04:34 am (UTC)
I prefer the HBIC Sora especially since she bagged Matt ^__^
hera_bearrra 27th-Dec-2012 04:38 am (UTC)
Noooooo I wanted her with Tai

That Christmas episode where Sora rejected Tai was so sad
etoile_amore 27th-Dec-2012 04:42 am (UTC)
broke my wee heart omg

/Tai lover
kingsmere 27th-Dec-2012 04:53 am (UTC)
It was so sudden, too, considering everything before was Tai/Sora.

NOT OVER IT
bananainpyjamas 27th-Dec-2012 06:38 am (UTC)
OMG I remember that, so traumatic for my younger self. Particularly since Tai/Sora seemed totally on track to become canon and then Matt/Sora came out of nowhere, lol.
hrhobo 27th-Dec-2012 09:21 am (UTC)
mte :( sora became a basic bitch after puberty lbr.
scarletfbl 27th-Dec-2012 04:44 am (UTC)
ugh, I was so fucking jealous of her. Because, you know, she totally ruined any chance I would have with Matt. Skank.
koala_d 27th-Dec-2012 06:48 am (UTC)
lol
ectypes 27th-Dec-2012 05:11 pm (UTC)
YES
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