Vanity Is Feminine: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Xanth]]'' is another fantasy series that caters to this concept, taking the All Women Are Vain and [[All Men Are Perverts]] approach. Xanth's archaic prohibition against female rulers is presented as unfairly sexist, but the concept that all women desire to be considered beautiful more than almost anything else, and enjoy being seen as beautiful more than the promise of privacy, is completely inoffensive and simple truth.
{{quote|A pretty girl could express shock and distress if someone saw her bare torso, but privately she would be pleased if the reaction were favorable.}}
* Gilderoy Lockhart of ''[[Harry Potter]]'' ''[[Harry Potter (Franchise)/Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets|and the Chamber of Secrets]]''. His pride may have made him a villain, but it is his vanity that makes him unlikeable in the first place, and he's mocked for it throughout. He eventually proves to be a lying, ineffectual coward whose triumphs are a scam. Also, the guy dresses like [http://images.wikia.com/harrypotter/images/3/36/Gilderoy_Lockhart_002.JPG this].
** Admittedly, his vanity wasn't disliked because it was feminine, but because he could hardly go a sentence without saying how great his smile was. The majority of the major female characters in the books don't seem to care too much about their looks, except on special occasions, like balls and weddings.
* ''[[The Belgariad]]'' makes some use of this as well. Certainly no female is established as neglecting her physical appearance when she had any other option available. While 7000-year-old Belgarath appears as an old man (and in fact takes care to look like a vagabond), his 3000-year-old daughter Polgara appears eternally 20 -- by choice, since while an elderly ''male'' sorcerer may appear learned and formidable an elderly female sorceress would be seen as a crone. Though as a child she kept herself filthy and unkempt, after her sister's marriage she came out of her shell and went to the opposite extreme entirely, constantly bathing, preening, and dressing flatteringly.
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* ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'': Even Toph, who was thrilled to learn the actor playing her was a huge bulking male, hides a side that wants to be pretty, was deeply hurt by girls mocking her appearance, and shared a bonding experience with Katara as they went to a beauty spa.
* ''[[The Smurfs]]'': [[Meaningful Name|Vanity Smurf]] would seem to fit the bill, a narcissist never seen without a mirror at hand. Naturally, he is quite [[Ambiguously Gay]].
* A ''[[Hey Arnold!]]'' episode plays around with this when the girls throw a makeover party and deliberately exclude the tomboyish Helga. When Helga tries to play with the boys instead, they mock her for being ugly and unfeminine. Helga caves and dolls herself up, then joins the other girls at the party. After a while, she starts to realize how ridiculous the whole thing is, considering their age. "We're nine years old! We don't ''have'' signs of aging!" She persuades the other girls to her side... and they wind up administering the intended makeover to one of the unfortunate boys who tried to crash their party and found himself outmatched.
 
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