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S Reflection Of Social Power In Charles Perrault's Cinderella

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(Botelho & Rudman, 2009). This social power is not obtained until they are married and are given it because their husbands had that social power. This concept, that women need men to be financially stable, allows for the men in these books to be seen as providing the reward of wealth for marriage. Cinderella does eventually receive financial wealth but is it through her marriage to the prince. Pg. 225 says that the happy ending is that Cinderella regains her status, but not in her own right. Rather, she receives her upper class status as a function of her husband’s position (Botelho & Rudman, 2009). Cinderella’s reflection of wealth equating to power has been found in hundreds of versions of this story. Charles Perrault finds an additional version of Cinderella that depicts Cinderella as socially and financially arriving when she marries the prince in his story, Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper (1982/1988). The three versions of Cinderella below share other common characteristics of the culture such as the belief that is you do good then you will be rewarded, the idea that if you keep your head down, do not complain too much then you can achieve something through your hard work and the belief that if you do wicked things then you will be punished her those actions. Using the components of culture across the three different versions of Cinderella chosen, I have concluded that the culture of all three novels is similar. On pg. 237 of our text it says that

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