varsity blues
"Sports Dominated World: Through the Eyes of Varsity Blues."Traditionally, sports have been dominated entirely by males, but recently, several attempts have been made to integrate women into this arena. Currently, women are found participating increasingly in sports such as tennis, diving, soccer, basketball, and ice skating among others. However, pop culture that reflects the trend in sports has had a negative effect on the women's sports movement. One movie out of the hundreds that do this is the 1999 football flick Varsity Blues. This motion picture, although it tries to explain the allure football has for a small Texas town, winds up dignifying and idolizing men's role in football. Within the same town of West Canaan women are also subjected to gender stereotypes since they can only be the peppy cheerleader or the sexy co ed. Families also participate in the degradation of football by instilling values in the game and submitting their children to incredible pressure to perform; as if this could somehow influence their reputation and quality of family life. The town as a whole at times either directly or indirectly promotes success in football, instead of education.Throughout the movie, one can see several instances wher
This situation seems to express the few options for small town women where the opportunities are so few that not even education is enough to rise above. When it's Mox's turn he hits his father in the face apparently from lack of talent. If a player is injured, they are persuaded by Kilmer to take intravenous painkillers all for their performance to persist. The teacher in Varsity Blues serves as a perfect example of how an educator, specifically a woman, must strip in order to maintain certain commodities such as her convertible. The film embarks on the appeal of football for the township: the belief of "escaping" from it and the ticket football bids. Talent is also questioned as displayed with Coach Kilmer who acts upon the players and is perceived as glorious for pursuits of dubious victory. This is most evident in Moxon's situation where his academic endeavors go unnoticed and he is only able to achieve high status in the town when he begins to perform athletically. He emphasizes solely on victory for the town than the wellbeing of his team. " Everything from sexual stereotypes to athleticism takes the place of education as the only road to success. It is ironic that the very actions that the movie seems to criticize are itself the ones that it commits. When all is said and done, this movie is nothing but a compilation of various gender stereotypes from the successful jock to the failed educator to parental rivalry. "Don't think for one second I can't mess with your transcripts and get this whole deal blown for you. Also, the film portrays that education has nothing to put forward, whether a teacher or a pupil, none can benefit from schooling within the town, just from football. At the outset of the movie the glory goes to the male character alone, while the female characters fail to rise to their potential.
Common topics in this essay:
West Canaan,
Der Beek,
Varsity Blues,
Coach Kilmer,
University Don't,
Blues Traditionally,
Unlike Moxon,
Brown University,
varsity blues,
west canaan,
brown university,
academic endeavors,
role football,
football town,
success film,
gender stereotypes,
ticket football,
scholarship brown,
|