Women have always had inherent value owing to their ability to birth children. By contrast, men have always had to accrue value unto themselves by their works and deeds. I think this fundamental reality is reflected in our media depictions of male versus female protagonists.
The hero’s journey is essentially the coming-of-age story of boys becoming men via trials and suffering. We become worthy of our stations in life, and our women and our families, through accomplishment and overcoming challenges. Or we fail, and we die, literally or spiritually. Either way, it’s interesting.
Women don’t experience the same climb. They begin the game with tremendous, society-sustaining value. It literally cannot be overstated. It is, however, automatic and requires no effort. There’s no progression or arch or triumph. The only potential for drama is the tragedy that results when a woman squanders her greatest value.
Injecting women into traditionally masculine “hero’s journey” stories is a recipe for boredom. Because women begin the story with all of the value they require to be accepted and promoted by the tribe. Whatever motivations are concocted for these female protagonists are inevitably shallow and pointless. Their arcs are flat and uninspiring. The most they can muster is obnoxious and entitled subversion; they rebel against the “unfair restrictions” placed upon them by nature - as if men are so privileged in their mandatory pain and labor.
I think this theory maps pretty well onto modern girl boss characters. I’m sure it has been explored. Just connecting my own personal dots on this one.
I'd argue you're mostly right as women have their own archetype that is just as action oriented as men's hero's journey: vengeance
The phrase 'hell have no wrath like a woman scorned' is there for a reason. Many great stories come from women losing everything they had and coming back vengeful, whether something like Kill Bill or you could include The Ring for a supernatural element. They hold long standing grudges for what they lost, they are vindictive, merciless, spitful, making it appear that we have unleashed pure wrath because we ripped everything away from this woman.
Now THAT is interesting for a depiction of a female character if you don't want her in a supportive role. It's better to have this for women and the Hero's journey for men as they play off each other beautifully, whether opposing each other or actually mutually working together.
"Fury" for that expression, not "wrath".
Don't know if I agree, I picture Roberta from Black Lagoon as an archetype of this.
She wasn't crazy (in blood trail yeah but not the standard one) she was essentially 'terminator in a maid's outfit' cold, calculating and vengeful. Fury doesn't fit that for me as more emotional, it's the difference between your mom yelling at you and your mom staring at you dead silent.