Sailor Moon is a Fighter
Sailor Moon deserves praise of her birthright to be a fighter--for love. Sailor Moon has been dubbed to be the feminist heroine for more than 20 years later. She is nothing short of a warrior since her start in the 90s with its recent coveted revivals of tracksuits, chokers an other feminist phenomenon, The Powerpuff Girls.
On the surface, Sailor Moon may not seem like your traditional example of a likely feminist, with her tendency to be boy-crazy and obsession of feeling beautiful. She has her incessant of crying, whining and just being sensitive, often in front of a fridge-load of food, her bed or anywhere. Its evident that girls can allow themselves to be vulnerable but face evil things in the face. The show's core narrative of girl power within female friendships that enable them to conquer all evil. Sailor Moon and the entire dynamic is incredibly progressive in its 90's run date."I recently started watching the show [Sailor Moon], and when you think about it, its really radical," says teenage feminist heroine, Rowan Blanchard says who is part of Gen-Z adopters we need. On Sailor Moon, "women don't have to sacrifice being emotional and having a sister hood in order to save the world," she said in Teen Vogue December Issue. Even Blanchard sees something the series portrays is that you can save the world, do it with all your girls, and then go cry yourself to sleep," Rowan continued with Teen Vogue.
A collaborative campaign between original Sailor Moon creator, Naoko Takeuchi, and the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW) to raise awareness about HIV/AIDS, STDs, and STIs. Sailor Moon and her friends are the superheroes we can all count on.
Advice of the Day:
"You should always read by people you don't agree with...we should understand why things make us upset,"-Hari Nef