Given you listed no sources I decided to look for myself... and yeah, doesn't look like your knowledge checks out, so you'll have to provide me with some sources.Bara_no_Hime said:And, before you accuse me of ignorance, I think you might want to check on my knowledge first.
Source? I can find no record of this. There were a few councils scattered through the middle ages where this happened, but for the most part witch hunts were condemned and outlawed by the church - their official stance being that witchcraft doesn't exist. In fact the anti-witchcraft laws tended to come from the secularists, not the Catholics. And around 385 CE Priscillian (a man) became the first heretic ever sentenced to death by Christians for practicing witchcraft, meaning these laws didn't specifically target women at all.Bara_no_Hime said:Since around 500 CE, the reason for the trope has been to keep women out of positions of power. This was implemented by the Catholic Church to increase the power of the Pope and provide an excuse to execute strong women (aka "Witches"). Only passive women, who sit and wait to be rescued, were proper women. Strong women who could rescue themselves were "witches" and needed to die.
From trusty Wikipedia:
Altogether it may be said that in the first thirteen hundred years of the Christian era we find no trace of that fierce denunciation and persecution of supposed sorceresses which characterized the cruel witch-hunts of the 16th and 17th centuries, particularly in the Protestant areas of Europe and America.
Ok? What does this have to do with the damsel in distress?Bara_no_Hime said:By 400 years ago, it was a trope because it had always been a trope. And then things started to get a little better for a while. The Catholic Church lost power after the Reformation, women started being able to speak their mind (a bit more anyway) under (some of) the new churches.
You're not giving me any context. WHY did womens rights come crashing down? WHY were weak women glorified? WHY did dead women become a thing? WHY is the trope "anti-woman"? I get that it paints the woman as an object, etc. but how is it different to any other stereotype inserted to tell the hero's tale? The woman is desired for her beauty, the wise old man is desired for his knowledge and wisdom. Does that mean Star Wars is "anti-old guy" because Obi Wan or Yoda can be reduced to a tome? Or is being wanted for your beauty just more offensive than being wanted for your brains? Why? Why is being physically desirable a bad thing? Why is being fair and passive a bad thing? Why should a woman HAVE to be an ass-kicking dragon slayer to be a "strong female character"? But eh, I'm digressing.Bara_no_Hime said:And then around 200 years ago, that came crashing back down again. Not only were weak women glorified, causing the rebirth of this trope as a Courtly Bard trope, but DEAD women became a thing. That's what led to the "dead mother" trope for female protagonists.
Most of our fairy tales were written down during the Victorian Era by courtly bards and writers. That's why so many use tropes like this (and other anti-woman tropes) - because they were popular in society then.
Yeah - and little girls loved the shit out of those movies. Again, why should a female character have to be a warrior to skirt accusations of sexism? In those two cases I agree with you though, as the women overcome their problems through no effort of their own, and instead rely on secondary characters to do it all for them. Not a particularly interesting protagonist or good role model in my opinion, but it panders to that sense of fantasy we all have where we just wish shit would instantly be better. I mean, in those movies Prince Charming is hardly more than a wallet with a chiseled jaw, representing the "better life". Painting men as a free ticket to liberation (if they're pretty enough) isn't any better than painting women as lazy.Bara_no_Hime said:Disney brought a lot of these back into popularity during the 1940-60s with their early movies (feature length, not shorts) like Snow White and Cinderella. There are actually three versions of Cinderella - the bloody German version, the polite French version, and the other French version where Cinderella fights with a sword and kills Ogres because she's fucking awesome. Disney took the Polite and German versions and mixed them (removing the blood) to create their version.
You're misunderstanding me. You've given examples of the trope existing but haven't provided any reasonable explanation as to WHY the trope exists. Both you and Ms. Sarkeesian just seem to imply "this exists, it paints a (in my opinion) negative picture of women, therefore men are to blame for it". I presented the origins of the trope (which you agreed with) to try to explain WHY it exists - and it's not because men are jerks.Bara_no_Hime said:The point is, yes, the trope was created thousands and thousands of years ago by early tribal humans where everyone was treated like property. If you won a war in that time, the losers were your slaves. Your soldiers got to rape all the women so that the next generation would be all your kids. Do you really want to use that bloody, awful time period as a defense for modern tropes?
**facepalm**Bara_no_Hime said:We've evolved as a society since then. Is it that much to ask that we don't treat people as property? As a prize to be won?
Sources: (sorry, I don't know how to use footnotes)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch-hunt#Middle_Ages
http://www.catholicbridge.com/catholic/timeline_of_catholic_church.php