"Masculinities in Two Novelized YA 'Cinderella' Adaptations: Disrupting Hegemonic Power and Relationship" (Linda T Parsons)
"Masculinities in Two Novelized YA 'Cinderella' Adaptations: Disrupting Hegemonic Power and Relationship" (Linda T Parsons)
"Masculinities in Two Novelized YA 'Cinderella' Adaptations: Disrupting Hegemonic Power and Relationship" (Linda T Parsons)
Linda T. Parsons
Marvels & Tales, Volume 36, Number 2, 2022, pp. 242-257 (Article)
[ Access provided at 6 Jun 2023 11:18 GMT from National University of Singapore ]
Linda T. Parsons
Marvels & Tales: Journal of Fairy-Tale Studies, Vol. 36, No. 2 (2022), pp. 242–257. Copyright © 2022 by
Wayne State University Press, Detroit, MI 48201.
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feature a female focalizer and the “now expected feminist transformation of the
passive princess into the spunky girl” (Didicher 49). Mechanica and Cinder are
distinctive because they also feature a transformed prince.
What do we know about the prince who rescues the beautiful maiden
in classic trial-rescue-redemption fairy tales? For those of us whose child-
hoods were imbued with the tales of Charles Perrault and Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm, and who were heavily influenced by the Disneyfication of these tales,
the answer is, “Very little.” The princes in these tales are not named, nor do
they exhibit distinct personalities.1 They are seemingly interchangeable and
trapped in the limiting and limited role of falling in love at first sight, claiming
the beautiful maiden, and returning to their father’s castle. In The Hard Facts
of the Grimms’ Fairy Tales, Maria Tatar writes, “The tale tells us nothing more
about [Cinderella’s prince] than that he is the son of a king. Lacking a history,
a story, and even a name, he is reduced to the function of prince-rescuer wait-
ing in the wings for his cue” (92). Although he is necessarily handsome, pow-
erful, and wealthy, the prince in tales popularized by Perrault, the Grimms,
and Disney is also vapid, shallow, and anonymous (Jorgensen 353). At the
same time, he enacts power as domination over other males (and certainly
over females) and in his unquestioned birthright to ascend the throne and
rule the kingdom (Kelley 35). Building on studies of masculinity in fairy tales
and YA fiction, I analyze how the princes in Cornwell’s Mechanica and Meyer’s
Cinder are fully realized, dynamic, named characters who fulfill roles beyond
that of prince-rescuer, and how their representations disrupt hegemonic forms
of power and relationships.
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have informed this analysis (Bean and Harper 14; Gardiner 11). R. W. Connell
and James Messerschmidt identified hegemonic masculinity as society’s “most
honored way of being a man” (832), with idealized characteristics that include
physical prowess and athleticism, rugged individualism and self-discipline,
competitiveness and aggression, stoicism and self-sufficiency, and misogyny
and homophobia (Haywood and Mac an Ghaill 579; Swain 337; Romøren
and Stephens 217). Hegemonic masculinity stands in opposition to, and is
privileged over, other identities; male is not female, male is not effeminate, and
male is not homosexual (Attebery 332; Dutro 470). Furthermore, it is always
the dominant form when multiple masculinities are in play (Dutro 471; Swain
336). Betsy Cornwell and Marissa Meyer employ metonymic configuration
to “instantiate a schema for hegemonic masculinity” (Romøren and Stephens
218) through King Corsin and the stepsisters’ suitors in Mechanica and Queen
Levana in Cinder, who represent patriarchal hegemony in contrast to or in
conflict with each prince.2
To contrast the princes in Mechanica and Cinder to masculinity’s hege-
monic form, I have found the work of scholars Rolf Romøren, John Stephens,
and Jon Swain helpful and will therefore relate the concept of the Sensitive
New Man to that of personalized masculinities.3 Males who enact personalized
masculinities do not aspire to, nor do they challenge, hegemonic position-
ing. Rather, they exist separately as a self-contained group, and they are more
secure in their performances and positioning than those with hegemonic capi-
tal (Swain). The Sensitive New Man (SNM), as identified by Rolf Romøren and
John Stephens, exemplifies a personalized masculinity. SNM characteristics
include taking pleasure in female companionship; being respectful of others’
space and feelings; being “well-kempt, but unselfconscious about appearance”;
“serious” yet willing to be “playful”; “artistic” and “idealistic” (225). In another
analysis, John Stephens describes an SNM character as “other-regarding in
interpersonal relations; affectionate; calm; self-possessed, but approachable;
considerate and respectful of female companions” (xv). Characteristics of
the Sensitive New Man are evident in the ways the princes in Mechanica and
in Cinder disrupt hegemonic power and relationships to enact personalized
masculinities.
Romøren and Stephens also observe how female authors often seek to
influence their implied female readers to reject hegemonic males in favor
of those “who instantiate an SNM schema” (225).4 Similarly, in “Female
Focalizers and Masculine Ideals: Gender as Performance in Twilight and The
Hunger Games,” Lykke Guanio-Uluru notes that Stephanie Meyer and Suzanne
Collins, the female authors of these two YA novels respectively, advocate for
male performances of, and female preferences for, alternative masculinities;
these authors feature female focalizers who ultimately choose males who
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only good ones are kept for the royals” (132). In this telling statement, he not
only shows compassion for Caro and her mother but simultaneously critiques
health-care inequities in the kingdom. He insists that if he had any true power,
he would immediately make lovesbane legal again.
Whereas Prince Christopher in Mechanica hopes to break his father’s
authoritarian rule, Prince Kai in Cinder aspires to continue his father’s legacy
of service to the Commonwealth. This stance disrupts masculine power as
authority over others and reconstructs it as other-regarding. When the novel
opens, Emperor Rikan has contracted letumosis, and his father’s advisor insists
that Kai must prepare for his ascension. Kai muses that the true emperor lies
dying before him; he believes himself to be an “imposter” (107). Immediately
upon his father’s death, Kai reflects on his inadequacies and believes himself
to be “too young, too stupid, too optimistic, too naïve” (139) to rule wisely.
He questions his ability to rule rather than accepting the emperorship as his
natural birthright. In a moment of vulnerability (and in a private space with
Cinder), he admits that he thinks he will ruin everything when he becomes
emperor. For Kai, power is not a privilege of birthright but a responsibility he
feels unqualified to take up.
The contrast between Prince Kai and the Lunar Queen Levana critiques
the use and abuse of absolute power, evoking the hegemonic male schema
while upending the gender binary. Evolved from an old Earthen colony on the
moon, Lunars are “hated and despised by every culture in the galaxy” (292),
“and Queen Levana [is] the worst of all of them” (43). Earthens fear Lunars
because of their ability to glamour others to see what they want them to see
and think what they want them to think. Kai is appalled when Queen Levana
comes to Earth immediately after Emperor Rikan’s death with just enough
letumosis antidote to cure one adult male. He is not the only one who finds
her presence abhorrent, but when the citizens of New Beijing protest her pres-
ence on Earth, she glamours them into submission. Levana rules “through
fear rather than justice” (273). In contrast, Kai says that “when citizens are
unruly, there’s usually a reason for it” (207), and he believes in addressing
that reason.
The way Kai intends to rule is evident in his coronation attire, which is
designed to convey altruistic ideals: embroidered turtledoves symbolize peace
and love, silver stars on his cloak signify the peace and unity of the six Earthen
kingdoms, and twelve chrysanthemums portend the flourishing of the twelve
Commonwealth provinces. The tributes he receives from citizens are ribbons
or medallions symbolizing “long life, wisdom, goodness of heart, generosity,
patience, joy” (308). These small, symbolic gifts are quite different from the
extravagant tributes monarchs typically receive, and this difference epitomizes
a reconfiguration of power. Kai’s coronation vows further establish that ruling
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be. It complicates his identity, and it is all the more egregious since readers
experience it from Cinder’s perspective.
The pandemics that ravage both fairy-tale worlds also create a dialogic
link to today’s reality, and in this light too the princes’ responses, and thereby
each prince himself, is relatable and desirable. The COVID-19 pandemic has,
at the time of this writing, killed 598,787 Americans and 3,927,222 people
worldwide (“WHO” n. pag.). In Mechanica, Fey’s Croup is curable if one has
the financial means and the connections to procure lovesbane. The inequi-
table health care in Esting parallels the current health disparities in the United
States, as racial and ethnic minorities are not only at greater risk for contracting
COVID-19 but also have less access to vaccines (Centers for Disease Control
n. pag.). Prince Christopher aspires to make quality health care and lovesbane
available to all Estingers. In Cinder, contracting letumosis results in certain
death, and it is a form of biological warfare that is part of Queen Levana’s plan
to conquer Earth. Prince Kai’s quest to find a cure continues throughout the
series. It is unclear whether or not each prince will be successful in his attempt
to stop the disease that ravages his country. However, their sincere commit-
ment to the welfare of others is a characteristic of the SNM embodiment of
masculinity, and the female focalizers admire them for it.
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hegemonic conventions prize the strength and athleticism of the male phy-
sique, but the female focalizers in Cornwell’s Mechanica and Meyer’s Cinder
admire their prince, primarily, from the shoulders up. In Fashion in the Fairy
Tale Tradition: What Cinderella Wore, Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario notes that there
is “a profound emphasis on the gaze and its direction” (67) in Cinderella’s
world, and this gaze involves women watching other women and the prince
watching Cinderella. Positioning the prince as the object of Cinderella’s gaze in
the two novels reflects changing power dynamics that disrupt hegemonic mas-
culinity and the hierarchical gender binary in contemporary society (Gardiner
9; Nodelman 7). As Jeana Jorgensen observes, “the pleasure and power inher-
ent in being the gazer rather than the gazed-upon” (352) positions the one
who gazes as a subject with agency. The gaze of female focalizers serves to
enhance young females’ self-concept and restructure their relationships with
males (Romøren and Stephens 225). The gaze of Cornwell’s and Meyer’s female
focalizers, constructed for their intended female audience, subverts the sexual
nature of the male gaze as Cinder and Mechanica each closely scrutinize the
prince’s face for his emotional reactions and seek sartorial clues to his identity.
Chastity, the meanest stepsister in Cornwell’s Mechanica, perpetuates the
traditional conceptualization of the patriarchal prince as “always handsome,
and charming, and brave, and romantic” (89). In contrast, when Mechanica
first meets Prince Christopher incognito as Fin, he is undoubtedly the object
of her gaze, but she observes his ease and sensitivity rather than his masculine
physique. She notices his “liquid-dark brown eyes, crinkled at the corners”
and his “sable curls” (105), and she observes his “fluid and self-assured grace”
(154), which she compares to the bombastic comportment of her stepsisters’
suitors. Fin’s ease is undoubtedly related to the fact that he is actually Prince
Christopher, but the suitors’ affected grandiosity evokes the contrasting hege-
monic schema that dooms men to “continual and humiliating fear of failure to
live up to the masculinity mark” (Gardiner 6). Fin’s demeanor positions him
outside this angst as he embodies a personalized masculinity that Mechanica
finds attractive.
Mechanica uses Fin’s attire as a clue to his identity. She notes the sartorial
elegance of his “white shirt, . . . a gray wool buttoned vest and black win-
ter coat and breeches, all tailored to his broad frame, and black, new-looking
leather boots” (155). His clothing and his gesture of spreading his overcoat for
them to sit on lead Mechanica to think his parents might be high-level servants
at the palace. At the ball, however, Fin’s attire immediately signifies that he is
Prince Christopher: “the medals on his black dress uniform, the thin plati-
num circlet on his head, and especially the Heir’s crest near his heart” (248).
Although this transformation echoes the trope of Cinderella’s “reinvention by
dress” (Guanio-Uluru 212), Prince Christopher’s worth is not dependent on,
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nor is it changed by, his clothing (Do Rozario 4). In this case, it is not the
clothes that make the man. After learning of Prince Christopher/Fin’s dual
identity, Mechanica observes that “the mischievous quirk in his eyebrows and
the open kindness of his face were just the same as they had always been”
(249).
Cinder never mentions Kai’s strength, or his physique, but does com-
ment on his eyes, hair, and facial expressions. During their first encounter,
his “startled copper-brown eyes and black hair,” and his “lips that every girl
in the country had admired a thousand times” (Meyer 6) do not escape her
gaze. On other occasions, his grin is “charming and unexpected” (126), and
he shrugs in response to a question, “seemingly uncomfortable, which was an
oddly charming look on him” (297).7 When the truth is revealed that Cinder is
Lunar and cyborg, Kai is no stoic; he is appalled, and vulnerable, and human.
Cinder watches him as he manifests an “ever-changing mix of disbelief and
confusion and regret” (367) before asking if she glamoured his attraction to
her. His feelings of betrayal are palpable, and in Kai’s range of emotions, we see
the construction of a masculinity that exceeds the limited emotions afforded
to hegemonic males.
Prince Christopher and Prince Kai inhabit spaces with Mechanica and
Cinder wherein they reveal their beliefs, feelings, and insecurities. They go
incognito among the people, affording them the opportunity to escape their
formal, public personas as heirs apparent and assume authentic, personal-
ized identities. Both Mechanica and Cinder first meet the disguised princes
in a marketplace, rather than at a ball, and the market stalls provide a private
space amid the bustling shoppers where their friendships develop. In private
spaces, masculinity is “constructed outside normative publicly sanctioned
ways of being male in the world” (Bean and Harper 27), and the lines blur
between masculine and feminine roles to disrupt hegemonic performances of
masculinity. Christopher and Kai are vulnerable—a traditionally feminine trait
(Attebery 332; Dutro 493). That they reveal their vulnerability only in such
private spaces perpetuates the hegemonic bifurcation of men’s public and pri-
vate selves, yet the fact that we see the distress of these princes reveals their
range of emotions and sensitivity. Importantly, the female focalizers are drawn
to these princes, in part because of their expressed emotions, presenting this
as a desirable male trait.
Fin repeatedly visits Mechanica in a shed she uses as a workshop within
the Forest Queen’s ruins, and this provides a private space where he can be
vulnerable and at ease. It is within this space that he tells her how much he
admires the Forest Queen as a patriot, a sentiment he would not dare voice
in public. They talk about Fey’s Croup and how unfair it is that its cure is
illegal. They share their love of horses and talk about how painful it is to lose
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one. They also sit quietly side by side; Fin does not dominate this quiet space
with speech but is comfortable sharing the silence. Reflecting qualities of the
Sensitive New Man, Fin openly shares his private thoughts and feelings, is at
ease in Mechanica’s company, and is respectful of the space they share.
In the private space of an elevator, Kai reveals his confusion and vulner-
ability. After learning that Levana glamoured the protesting citizenry and that
someone installed a Lunar communication chip in his personal android, Kai
abandons royal protocol and confides that he hates Levana. He asks Cinder
what she would do if she knew a cure for letumosis existed, but she would
have to ruin her life to obtain it. He finishes with “it seems my life is about to
be ruined” (230). Kai is desperate to obtain the antidote Queen Levana pos-
sesses, and the only viable option seems to be a marriage alliance with her. Kai
is willing to make that sacrifice in order to ease the suffering of all Earthens,
even as he is desperate not to do so.
Overall, it is obvious that Princes Christopher and Kai genuinely take plea-
sure in Mechanica’s and Cinder’s companionship. Theirs is not the courtship
of a prince seeking a beautiful maiden to wed; Christopher admires Mechanica
and Kai admires Cinder for their skill, intelligence, and determination, and the
attraction between the prince and the heroine grows out of initial friendship.
The princes do not dominate the relationships but are solicitous, attentive,
considerate, and respectful of Mechanica’s and Cinder’s feelings and seem to
truly enjoy being with them. They enact personalized masculinities that align
with SNM characteristics and stand apart from the toxicity of hegemony.
Within minutes of meeting Fin and Caro in the marketplace, Mechanica
feels as if they have “been standing together [their] whole lives” (Cornwell
110), and they begin a complicated three-way friendship. Fin consistently
treats Mechanica with warmth and affection, holding her hand, laughing with
her, and even giving her contraband Fey rhodopsis berries as a sign of trust.
She indulges in a heterosexual fantasy, and it is she who first kisses Fin, but he
immediately pulls away and escapes into the darkness after kissing her back.
Unlike the hegemonic male who is in control of his romantic relationships, or
at least presents himself as such, Fin seems overwhelmed by his complex emo-
tions as he fluctuates between confusion and self-assurance. His vulnerability
does not cancel out his masculinity but positions him in a personalized form
of masculinity.
Fin invites Mechanica to the ball, where she immediately comes face-to-
face with him as Prince Christopher. He is to choose a bride, and rumors spread
that he has chosen Mechanica. In his proposal to her, ill-conceived as it is, it is
evident that Prince Christopher cares deeply about his country. His proposal
is driven by a desire to inspire the people of Esting, particularly as they stand
on the brink of war with Faerie. He believes he and Mechanica would provide
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Estingers with “a happily-ever-after people will tell each other for generations”
(289). Yet the prince loves Caro, not Mechanica. When pressed, he admits
that he and Caro have been friends since they were very young children; he
cannot remember a time when he did not love her. In an act that breaks with
toxic, hegemonic masculinity and demonstrates his sensitivity to her feelings,
he recognizes and admits how “incredibly cruel” (287) it was not to be hon-
est with Mechanica. Prince Christopher is not Tatar’s “prince-rescuer waiting
in the wings for his cue” (Hard Facts 92) but a man who is in the process of
becoming. Caro thinks he can “be so dramatic” and “a bit moony sometimes”
(Cornwell 298) and that he will always make her a better friend than a lover.
Rather than acting out of toxic male pride when Mechanica refuses his pro-
posal, and Caro refuses his love, he becomes part of their chosen family. Caro
articulates their complex relationship: “We’re friends, aren’t we? Fin and I, you
and me, you and Fin, all the pairs that can be made of us, and the three of us
together, too” (301). In these three characters, readers see the creation and
appeal of a relationship outside of heteronormativity, with Prince Christopher
as one within and among, rather than the dominant figure, in this triad.
Similarly, Prince Kai is often humble and beseeching rather than demand-
ing in his relationship with Cinder, and he admits that he seeks her out
because she is easy to talk to. When he asks Cinder to call him Kai rather than
Your Highness, she objects that it would be improper to do so. His reply is
self-deprecating as he tells her not to make him turn his request in to a “royal
command” (Meyer 159). He repeatedly asks Cinder to attend the Coronation
Ball as his personal guest, and she persistently refuses. After Cinder ignores
his attempts to contact her, he returns to her mechanic stall to invite her to
the ball one final time. He accepts her rejection, exhibiting supportive atten-
tiveness, consideration of her feelings, and respect for the space she needs
when he mistakenly believes she will not attend the ball because one of her
stepsisters died of letumosis. This is not the hegemonic masculine behavior of
someone who expects his wishes to be fulfilled by a woman; rather, it is the
behavior of a man who is attuned to, and respectful of, others.
Observing that female authors of YA texts often feature young men who
embody the Sensitive New Man in an effort to disrupt hegemonic masculinity,
Romøren and Stephens propose that the textual objective here is to open pos-
sibilities for young men and to encourage young women to value expanded
ways of expressing masculinity. As I have shown, Cornwell and Meyer have
such a textual objective: the princes in their novels disrupt hegemonic mascu-
linity, and the female focalizers are attracted to them. While Nodelman stresses
that patriarchal tales, such as those by Charles Perrault and Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm and perpetuated by Walt Disney, limit and constrain individual expres-
sion and difference in favor of conformity, authors such as Cornwell and
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Notes
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