People Who Like To Read Can Get Caught Up In Women Adventurer Stories

By Linda Wallace


It seems that there has been a drought in the telling of positive stories about strong females. Last year, Wonder Woman was a box office hit, followed by many flicks with heroines of all shapes and sizes. However, it was less than a half century ago when the leading TV stations had at least one female led crime drama in their prime time lineup. Now it seems that women adventurer stories are back and better than before.

One may ask why this is important. There are many reasons and most relate to the feminist movements from nearly half a century ago. Women fought for the right to be heard and respected in environments where their input is equal to that of males in a similar role. Although Wonder Woman goes back to the 1940s, she was not very prominent until the early 1970s.

Instead of reading about Aqua Girl in the comics, readers should know that girls can have nontraditional employment. Job titles can range from game hunter to ocean engineer. What a lot of people do not realize is that women can excel in these jobs and are a lot more fun than sitting at a desk all day.

Although crime shows from the 1970s with one or more female leads may have been more entertaining than substantial, their weekly adventures and wins resonated with viewers. Women and girls began to feel that they could take on the world and could be in control of their own lives.

Nowadays, there have been many memorable characters who were later adapted as a movie or TV program. Wonder Woman started off as a comic strip character nearly 80 years ago and has been revamped several times. Nancy Drew, though not considered a superhero, has been a part of many adventures for almost the same length of time.

The great thing about the telling of adventurous accounts is that fiction can seem realistic when written well. In this day, there are few boundaries in telling a good story. It can be a fantasy, suspenseful, or even humorous. However, in the current cultural climate, it seems that more readers want to read more about their favorite heroine and less about glamor or their love life.

It was also around this time when the everywoman became the norm both in the media and in real life. In the 1980s, female lead characters had professional careers while raising a family were beginning to emerge and few claimed this was not reality. However, more females have found they could prove the naysayers wrong.

These periods of growth in strong female characters has led us to the present where women hold positions of power or are leaders in their community. Now, storylines have characters with more depth and there is less emphasis on looks. The same way these roles empowered girls of the 1970s and 1980s, young people today only see a person in charge and not gender.

These days, young girls need to see as many positive images as possible. Oftentimes, parents who let their young children have online access cannot control or explain every image that pops on the screen. This is why exposing them to stories with a strong female lead early in the development is a good idea.




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