她们的传奇

已完结

主演:塞西尔·德·弗朗斯

类型:动漫地区:法国语言:法语年份:2020

 剧照

她们的传奇 剧照 NO.1她们的传奇 剧照 NO.2她们的传奇 剧照 NO.3她们的传奇 剧照 NO.4她们的传奇 剧照 NO.5她们的传奇 剧照 NO.6

 长篇影评

 1 ) 好看 启发女性(本剧评内包含剧中出现的所有女性名字和画像)

这部剧集里每一个女性的故事和职业都不尽相同

给人不一样的启发

看完以后会感叹原来女性确实不受限 我们可以做任何我们希望做的事情

女性可以有野心,可以激动,可以上战场,可以抗争。

除此之外本剧的画风也非常绚烂多彩 人物的刻画有趣生动 审美情趣很高

配音演员活泼且都为女性

我认为很适合家长在女孩小时候给她们播放,让她们意识到:她们真的可以成为任何人!

 2 ) 分集Title-Name年岁概览

推荐:

《自由的她们》

《无名巾帼》

《王牌女郎》

1.Annette Kellerman 1886-1975 美人鱼

2.Wu Zetian 624-705 女皇帝

3.Josephine Baker 1906-1975 舞者 法国抵抗运动成员

4.Nellie Bly 1864-1922 记者

5.Leymah Gbowee 1972- 社会工作者

6.Temple Grandin《自闭历程》 1947- 动物的翻译官

7.Naziq al-Abid 1898-1959大家闺秀变斗士

8.Tove Jansson 1914-2001 画家 姆明之母

9.Margaret Hamilton 1902-1985 吓人的演员

10.Giorgina Reid 1908-2001 灯塔守护人

11.The Shaggs 1948-/1949-/1951-2006 摇滚明星

12.Mae Jemison 1956- 宇航员

13.Peggy Guggenheim 1898-1979 现代艺术发烧友

14.Sonita Alizadeh 1996- 说唱歌手

15.Delia Akeley 1875-1970 探险家

16.Phulan Devi 1963-2001 女匪王

17.Jesselyn Radack 1970- 律师

18.Christine Jorgensen 1926-1989 跨性别名人

19.Therese Clerc 1927-2016 现实的空想家

20.Agnodice ~350 AV J.C. 妇科医生

21.Lozen 1840-1889 战士和萨满法师

22.Frances Glessner Lee 1878-1962 犯罪现场微缩模型师

23.Clementine Delait 1865-1939 大胡子女人

24.Hedy Lamarr 1914-2000 演员兼发明家

25.Las Mariposas 1924/26/35-1960 反抗的姐妹

26.Josephina Van Gorkum 1820-1888 固执的爱人

27.Cheryl Bridges 1947- 运动员

28.Katia Krafft 1942-1991 火山学者

29.Betty davis 1945- 词曲作家

30.Nzinga 1583-1663 恩辛加女王

 3 ) 摘录(维基百科)

因为在B站看的,然后意外的发现YouTube上原版视频竟然不氪播放了,我去寻找剧中每一个女性时候发现,有很多竟然是搜索不到的,然后就在维基百科作了一个简单的摘录,部分即使能搜索到的发现维基百科和百度百科的内容也很大差异,怎么说呢,感觉有点悲哀。

安妮特凯勒曼:为自己的身体骄傲,是没有年龄限制的。(Annette Marie Sarah Kellermann(6 July 1887 – 6 November 1975)was an Australian professional swimmer,vaudevillestar, film actress, and writer.Kellermann was one of the first women to wear aone-piece bathing costume, instead of the then-acceptedpantaloons, and inspired others to follow her example. Kellerman's swimming costumes became so popular that she started her own fashion line of one-piece bathing suits. Kellermann helped popularize the sport ofsynchronised swimming, and authored a swimming manual. She appeared in several movies, usually with aquatic themes, and as the star of the 1916 filmA Daughter of the Godswas the first major actress toappear nudein a Hollywood production. Kellermann was an advocate of health, fitness, and natural beauty throughout her life.)


武则天:


约瑟芬·贝克:去跳舞去唱歌,这是生命的活力。去帮助别人,这是责任。Josephine Baker(bornFreda Josephine McDonald, naturalised FrenchJoséphine Baker; 3 June 1906 – 12 April 1975) was an American-born French entertainer,French Resistanceagent, andcivil rightsactivist. Her career was centered primarily in Europe, mostly in her adopted France. She was the firstBlackwoman to star in a major motion picture, the 1927 silent filmSiren of the Tropics, directed byMario NalpasandHenri Étiévant.[1]During her early career, Baker was among the most celebrated performers to headline the revues of theFolies BergèreinParis. Her performance in the revueUn vent de foliein 1927 caused a sensation in the city. Her costume, consisting of only a short skirt of artificial bananas and a beaded necklace, became an iconic image and a symbol both of theJazz Ageand theRoaring Twenties.Baker was celebrated by artists and intellectuals of the era, who variously dubbed her the "Black Venus", the "Black Pearl", the "Bronze Venus", and the "Creole Goddess".[citation needed]Born inSt. Louis, Missouri, she renounced her U.S. citizenship and became a French national after her marriage to French industrialist Jean Lion in 1937.[2]She raised her children in France.She aided theFrench ResistanceduringWorld War II.[3]After the war, she was awarded theResistance Medalby theFrench Committee of National Liberation, theCroix de Guerreby theFrench military, and was named aChevalier of theLégion d'honneurby GeneralCharles de Gaulle.[4]Baker sang: "I have two loves, my country and Paris."[5]Baker refused to perform forsegregatedaudiences in the United States and is noted for her contributions to thecivil rights movement. In 1968, she was offered unofficial leadership in the movement in the United States byCoretta Scott King, followingMartin Luther King Jr.'sassassination. After thinking it over, Baker declined the offer out of concern for the welfare of her children.[6][7][third-party source needed]On 30 November 2021, she entered thePanthéonin Paris, the first black woman to receive one of the highest honors in France.[8]As her resting place is to remain inMonacoacenotaphwill be installed in vault 13 of the crypt in the Panthéon.[9]


娜丽布莱:真相往往令人不安,而揭露真相是改变现实的唯一方法。(Elizabeth Cochran Seaman(bornElizabeth Jane Cochran; May 5, 1864 – January 27, 1922), better known by her pen nameNellie Bly, was an American journalist, industrialist, inventor, and charity worker who was widely known for her record-breakingtrip around the worldin 72 days, in emulation ofJules Verne's fictional characterPhileas Fogg, and anexposéin which she worked undercover to report on a mental institution from within.She was a pioneer in her field and launched a new kind ofinvestigative journalism.)


莱伊曼·古博薇:只有女性团结,才能带来翻天覆地的改变!Leymah Roberta Gbowee(born 1 February 1972) is a Liberianpeace activistresponsible for leading a women's nonviolent peace movement,Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peacethat helped bring an end to theSecond Liberian Civil Warin 2003. Her efforts to end the war, along with her collaboratorEllen Johnson Sirleaf, helped usher in a period of peace and enabled a free election in 2005 that Sirleaf won.She, along withEllen Johnson SirleafandTawakkul Karman, were awarded the 2011Nobel Peace Prize"for theirnon-violentstruggle for the safety of women and forwomen's rightsto full participation in peace-building work."


坦普·葛兰汀:要驯服差异,就要把差异变成优势!Mary Temple Grandin(born August 29, 1947) is an American scientist and animal behaviorist. She is a prominent proponent for the humane treatment of livestock for slaughter and the author of more than 60 scientific papers on animal behavior. Grandin is a consultant to thelivestockindustry, where she offers advice on animal behavior, and is also anautismspokesperson.Grandin is one of the first autistic people to document the insights she gained from her personal experience of autism. She is currently afaculty memberwithAnimal Sciencesin the College of Agricultural Sciences atColorado State University.In 2010,Time100, an annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world, named her in the "Heroes" category.[2]She was the subject of the Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning semi-biographical filmTemple Grandin. Grandin has been an outspoken proponent ofautism rightsandneurodiversitymovements.[citation needed]


纳兹克·阿比德:没有什么能阻止对不公平的抗争。Nazik Khatim al-ʿAbid Bayhum(Arabic:نازك العابد) known as the "Joan of Arc of the Arabs"[1]was aSyrianwomen's rights activist, nationalist, and critic of Ottoman and French colonialism in Syria.[2]She was the first woman to earn rank in the Syrian Army for her role in forming the Red Star Society, a precursor to theInternational Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, during the battle ofMaysalun. She was a revolutionary fornational independenceandwomen's rightto work and vote in Syria.


托芙·扬松:说不定幸福就是生活在爱和创造之中呢?Tove Marika Jansson(Finland Swedish pronunciation:[ˈtuːve ˈjɑːnson](listen); 9 August 1914 – 27 June 2001) was aSwedish-speaking Finnishauthor, novelist, painter,illustratorandcomic stripauthor. Brought up by artistic parents, Jansson studied art from 1930 to 1938 inStockholm,HelsinkiandParis. Her first solo art exhibition was in 1943. At the same time, she was writing short stories and articles for publication, as well as creating the graphics for book covers and other purposes. She continued to work as an artist and a writer for the rest of her life.Jansson wrote theMoominbooks for children, starting in 1945 withThe Moomins and the Great Flood. The next two books,Comet in MoominlandandFinn Family Moomintroll, published in 1946 and 1948 respectively, were highly successful in sales, adding to sales of the first book. For her work as a children's writer she received theHans Christian Andersen Medalin 1966.[1][2]The Moomins also spun off to acomic strip, initially created by Jansson herself, and in 2016 Jansson was included inThe Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame.Starting with the semi-autobiographicalBildhuggarens dotter(Sculptor's Daughter) in 1968, Jansson wrote six novels, including the admired[3]Sommarboken(The Summer Book), and five books of short stories for adults.


玛格丽特·哈密尔顿:要学着接受自己的独特之处。Margaret Brainard Hamilton(December 9, 1902– May 16, 1985) was an American actress. She was best known for her portrayal of theWicked Witch of the West, and her Kansas counterpartAlmira Gulch, inMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer's filmThe Wizard of Oz(1939).[1]A former schoolteacher, she worked as acharacter actressin films for seven years before she was offered the role that defined her public image. In later years, Hamilton made frequent cameo appearances on televisionsitcomsandcommercials. She also gained recognition for her work as an advocate of causes designed to benefit children and animals and retained a lifelong commitment to public education.


乔治娜·里德:所有的记忆都被病魔带走,但是也有带不走的,比如梯田的技术。


The Shaggs:说不定尽力而为,就已经很厉害了呢The Shaggswere an Americanall-femalerockandoutsider musicband formed inFremont,New Hampshirein 1968. The band was composed of sisters Dorothy "Dot" Wiggin (vocals/lead guitar), Betty Wiggin (vocals/rhythm guitar), Helen Wiggin (drums) and, later, Rachel Wiggin (bass). They were occasionally joined on vocals by their brother Austin Jr. and nephew Robert.Dot, Betty and Helen formed the Shaggs in 1968, on the insistence of their father, Austin Wiggin, who believed that his mother had predicted their rise to stardom. Their only studio album,Philosophy of the World, was released in 1969. It failed to garner attention, though the Shaggs continued to perform locally. They disbanded in 1975 after the death of Austin.The Shaggs are notable for their perceived ineptitude at playing conventional rock music; they were described in oneRolling Stonearticle as "sounding likelobotomizedTrapp Familysingers."[7]Terry AdamsofNRBQcompared their melodic lines and structures to thefree jazzcompositions ofOrnette Coleman.


梅·贾米森:只要有信念,我们就能走的很远,无止境的远!Mae Carol Jemison(born October 17, 1956) is an Americanengineer,physician, and formerNASAastronaut. She became the firstblackwoman to travel into space when she served as amission specialistaboard theSpace ShuttleEndeavour. Jemison joined NASA'sastronaut corps in 1987and was selected to serve for theSTS-47mission, during which she orbited the Earth for nearly eight days on September 12–20, 1992.Born in Alabama and raised in Chicago, Jemison graduated fromStanford Universitywith degrees inchemical engineeringas well asAfricanandAfrican-American studies. She then earned her medical degree fromCornell University. Jemison was a doctor for thePeace CorpsinLiberiaandSierra Leonefrom 1983 until 1985 and worked as ageneral practitioner. In pursuit of becoming an astronaut, she applied to NASA.Jemison left NASA in 1993 and founded a technology research company. She later formed a non-profit educational foundation and through the foundation is the principal of the100 Year Starshipproject funded byDARPA. Jemison also wrote several books for children and appeared on television several times, including ina 1993 episodeofStar Trek: The Next Generation. She holds severalhonorary doctoratesand has been inducted into theNational Women's Hall of Fameand theInternational Space Hall of Fame.


佩姬·古根海姆:当我们懂得发现美的时候,艺术,便是让其他人也能感知这份美!Marguerite"Peggy"Guggenheim(/ˈɡʊɡənhaɪm/GUUG-ən-hyme; August 26, 1898 – December 23, 1979) was an Americanart collector,bohemianand socialite. Born to the wealthy New York CityGuggenheim family, she was the daughter ofBenjamin Guggenheim, who went down with theTitanicin 1912, and the niece ofSolomon R. Guggenheim, who established theSolomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Guggenheim collected art in Europe and America primarily between 1938 and 1946. She exhibited this collection as she built it; in 1949, she settled inVenice, where she lived and exhibited her collection for the rest of her life. ThePeggy Guggenheim Collectionis a modern art museum on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, and is one of the most visited attractions in Venice.


索妮塔·阿里扎德:重要的是,要想办法让世界听到你的声音。(待售新娘(qq音乐有))Sonita Alizadeh(Persian:سونیتا علیزاده; born 1996)[1]is anAfghanrapper and activist who has been vocal againstforced marriages. Alizadeh first gained attention when she released "Brides for Sale," a video in which she raps about daughters being sold into marriage by their families. With the help ofRokhsareh Ghaem Maghami, an Iranian documentary filmmaker who over three years documented her story in the filmSonita, Alizadeh filmed the video to escape a marriage her parents were planning for her, even though it is illegal for women to sing solo in Iran, where she was living at the time.[2]After releasing the video on YouTube, Alizadeh was contacted by the Strongheart Group, which offered her a student visa and financial help to come and study in the United States of America, where she then relocated and has resided since.[3]In 2015, she was listed as one ofBBC's 100 Women.[4]


迪莉娅·埃克利:话说回来,谁说旅游一定要有男人作伴呢?出发去冒险,永远不嫌晚。Delia Julia Akeley(December 5, 1869 – May 22, 1970), commonly known by her nickname,Mickie, was an Americanexplorer. She was born inBeaver Dam, Wisconsin, a daughter of Patrick and Margaret (née Hanberry) Denning, Irish immigrants.


普兰·黛维:要反抗不公,就永远不能让愤怒保持沉默。Phoolan Devi(10August 1963– 25July 2001), popularly known as "Bandit Queen", was an Indian female rights activist,banditand politician from theSamajwadi Partywho later served asMember of Parliament.Born into a poor family in ruralUttar Pradesh, Devi endured poverty,child marriageand had an abusive marriage before taking to a life of crime. Having developed major differences with her parents and being raped multiple times by her husband, the teenage Devi sought escape by running away and joining a gang of bandits. She was the only woman in that gang, and her relationship with one gang member, coupled withcastedifference, caused a gunfight between gang members. Devi's lover, Vikram Mallah, was killed in that gunfight. The victorious rival faction took Devi to their village of Behmai, confined her in a room, and took turns to rape her repeatedly over several weeks. After escaping, Devi rejoined the remnants of her Mallah's faction who were gangs ofMallaah. A few months later, her new gang descended upon the village of Behmai to exact revenge for what she had suffered.[1][2]As many as twenty-two men belonging to that village were shot dead by Devi's gang.Devi evaded capture for two years after the massacre before she and her few surviving gang members surrendered to the police in 1983. She was charged with 48 crimes, including multiple murders, plunder, arson and kidnapping for ransom.[3]Phoolan spent the next eleven years in jail, as the various charges against her were tried in court. The respectful sobriquet 'Devi' was conferred upon her by the media and public at this point.[4]In 1994, the state government headed byMulayam Singh Yadavof theSamajwadi Partywithdrew all charges against her and Devi was released.[3]She then stood for election to parliament as a candidate of theSamajwadi Partyand was twice elected to theLok Sabhaas theMember of ParliamentforMirzapur. In 2001, she was shot dead at the gates of her official bungalow (allotted to her asMP) in New Delhi bySher Singh Ranawhose kinsmen had been slaughtered at Behmai by her gang. The 1994 filmBandit Queen(made around the time of her release from jail) is loosely based on her life until that point.


简瑟琳·拉达克:要想知道真相,就得在必要时刻挑战法律。(Jesselyn Radack | Americans Who Tell The Truth)www.americanswhotellthetruth.orgJesselyn Radack(born December 12, 1970) is an Americannational securityand human rights attorney known for her defense ofwhistleblowers, journalists, andhacktivists. She graduated from Brown University and Yale Law School and began her career as an Honors Program attorney at theU.S. Department of Justice.She is notable for defending prominent whistleblowers, includingNational Security AgencywhistleblowersEdward SnowdenandThomas Drake, each of whom was charged under theEspionage Act of 1917, as well as for her own experience as a whistleblower at the U.S. Department of Justice.While at the Justice Department, she disclosed that theFederal Bureau of Investigation(FBI) committed anethics violationin their interrogation ofJohn Walker Lindh(the "AmericanTaliban" captured during the2001 invasion of Afghanistan) without an attorney present, and alleged that the Department of Justice attempted to suppress that information. The Lindh case was the first major terrorism prosecution after9/11.[7]Her experience is chronicled in her memoir,TRAITOR: The Whistleblowerand the "American Taliban"and the documentarySilenced.Radack is the director of National Security & Human Rights atExposeFacts' Whistleblower and Source Protection Program.[8]She has been widely published and quoted regarding whistleblower, surveillance, Internet freedom and privacy. Her writing has appearedThe New York Times,L.A. Times,Washington Post,Guardian,The Nation,Legal Times, and numerous law journals. She frequently appears in the press, including all the major television networks, NPR, PBS, CNN,Al Jazeera, and the BBC.


克里斯蒂娜·乔根森:出生时的身体无关紧要,每个人都有定义自己的自由。Christine Jorgensen(May 30, 1926 – May 3, 1989) was an Americantrans womanwho was the first person to become widely known in the United States for havingsex reassignment surgery. Jorgensen grew up in theBronx, New York City. Shortly after graduating from high school in 1945, she was drafted into theU.S. Armyduring World War II. After her military service, she attended several schools and worked; it is during this time she learned aboutsex reassignment surgery. Jorgensen traveled to Europe, and inCopenhagen, Denmark, obtained special permission to undergo a series of operations beginning in 1952.She returned to the United States in the early 1950s and hertransitionwas the subject of aNew York Daily Newsfront-page story. She became an instant celebrity, known for her directness and polished wit, and used the platform to advocate fortransgenderpeople. She also worked as an actress and nightclub entertainer and recorded several songs. Jorgensen often lectured on the experience of being transgender and published an autobiography in 1967.


克里斯蒂娜·乔根森:出生时的身体无关紧要,每个人都有定义自己的自由。Christine Jorgensen(May 30, 1926 – May 3, 1989) was an Americantrans womanwho was the first person to become widely known in the United States for havingsex reassignment surgery. Jorgensen grew up in theBronx, New York City. Shortly after graduating from high school in 1945, she was drafted into theU.S. Armyduring World War II. After her military service, she attended several schools and worked; it is during this time she learned aboutsex reassignment surgery. Jorgensen traveled to Europe, and inCopenhagen, Denmark, obtained special permission to undergo a series of operations beginning in 1952.She returned to the United States in the early 1950s and hertransitionwas the subject of aNew York Daily Newsfront-page story. She became an instant celebrity, known for her directness and polished wit, and used the platform to advocate fortransgenderpeople. She also worked as an actress and nightclub entertainer and recorded several songs. Jorgensen often lectured on the experience of being transgender and published an autobiography in 1967.


阿格诺迪斯:知识不是男人专有的,尤其是在涉及女性身体的时候。AgnodiceorAgnodike(Ancient Greek:ἈγνοδίκηAgnodikē,Greek pronunciation:[aŋnodíkɛː]c. 4th century BCE) is a legendary figure credited as the first femalemidwifeorphysicianin ancient Athens. Her story is told by the Roman authorGaius Julius Hyginusin hisFabulae. Agnodice is not generally believed to be a historical figure, but her story has been frequently deployed as a precedent for women practising midwifery or medicine, or as an argument against either of these.According to Hyginus, Agnodice studied medicine underHerophilus, and worked as a physician in her home city of Athens disguised as a man, because women at the time were forbidden from practising medicine. As her popularity with female patients grew, rival physicians accused her of seducing the women of Athens. She was tried, and revealed her sex to the jury by lifting her tunic (a gesture known in ancient Greek asanasyrma). Accused of illegally practising medicine as a woman, she was defended by the women of Athens who praised her for her effective treatments. She was acquitted, and the law against female physicians in Athens was revoked.


洛芩:力量和勇气不是男性的特权。Lozen(c. 1840-June 17, 1889) was a warrior and prophet of the ChihenneChiricahuaApache. She was the sister ofVictorio, a prominent chief. Born into the Chihenne band during the 1840s, Lozen was, according to legends, able to use herpowersin battle to learn the movements of the enemy.[1]According to James Kaywaykla, Victorio introduced her toNana, "Lozen is my right hand ... strong as a man, braver than most, and cunning in strategy. Lozen is a shield to her people".


弗朗西斯·格莱斯纳·李: 大热爱可以带来一场小革命,法医学之母。Frances Glessner Lee(March 25, 1878 – January 27, 1962) was an American forensic scientist. She was influential in developing the science of forensics in the United States.[1]To this end, she created theNutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, 20 true crime scene dioramas recreated in minute detail atdollhouse scale, used for training homicide investigators. Eighteen of the Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death are still in use for teaching purposes by the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, and the dioramas are also now considered works of art.[2]Glessner Lee also helped to establish the Department of Legal Medicine at Harvard, and endowed the Magrath Library of Legal Medicine there.[3]She became the first female police captain in the United States, and is known as the "mother of forensic science".


克莱芒蒂娜·德莱:自然总是充满惊喜,为什么要把他们藏起来呢?Clémentine Delait(5 March 1865 – 5 April 1939) was a Frenchbearded ladywho kept a café. She has been described by contemporaries as "the most illustrious and celebrated bearded lady in France" and "the perfect example of a bearded lady".


海蒂·拉码:美貌和智慧是可以并存的。Hedy Lamarr(/ˈheɪdi/; bornHedwig Eva Maria Kiesler; November 9, 1914[a]– January 19, 2000) was anAustrian-born American filmactressandinventor.[1]After a brief early film career in Czechoslovakia, including the controversialEcstasy(1933), she fled from her husband, a wealthy Austrian ammunition manufacturer, and secretly moved to Paris. Traveling to London,[2]she metMetro-Goldwyn-Mayerstudio headLouis B. Mayer, who offered her a movie contract in Hollywood. She became afilm starwith her performance inAlgiers(1938).[3]Her MGM films includeLady of the Tropics(1939),Boom Town(1940),H.M. Pulham, Esq.(1941), andWhite Cargo(1942). Her greatest success was as Delilah inCecil B. DeMille'sSamson and Delilah(1949).[4]She also acted on television before the release of her final film,The Female Animal(1958). She was honored with a star on theHollywood Walk of Famein 1960.[5]At the beginning ofWorld War II, she and composerGeorge Antheildeveloped a radio guidance system forAlliedtorpedoesthat usedspread spectrumandfrequency hoppingtechnology to defeat the threat ofjammingby theAxis powers.[6]Although theUS Navydid not adopt the technology until the 1960s,[7]the principles of their work are incorporated intoBluetoothandGPStechnology and are similar to methods used in legacy versions ofCDMAandWi-Fi.[8][9][10]This work led to their induction into theNational Inventors Hall of Famein 2014.


蝴蝶姐妹:为了纪念她们,11月25日被设立为国际反对妇女遭受暴力日。反对暴力和压迫,勇气必将战胜一切。TheMirabal sisters(Spanish pronunciation:[eɾˈmanas miɾaˈβal],Las Hermanas Mirabal) were three sisters, known commonly as Patria,Minerva, andMaría Teresa, who opposed the dictatorship ofRafael Trujillo(El Jefe) in theDominican Republicand were involved in clandestine activities against his regime.[1]The three sisters were assassinated on 25 November 1960. The last sister, Adela "Dedé", who was not involved in political activities at the time, died of natural causes on 1 February 2014.[2]The assassinations turned the Mirabal sisters into "symbols of both popular and feminist resistance".[3]In 1999, in their honor, theUnited Nations General Assemblydesignated 25 November theInternational Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.


约瑟芬娜·范·戈尔库姆:天主教徒喜欢上了新教徒


谢里尔·布里奇斯:我们远比自己想象的要强大。Cheryl Bridges, nowCheryl Treworgy, is an American former long-distance runner who once held the American and world record in themarathon, racing in the 1960s and 1970s. She was the first women runner to be on the cover of a running magazine.


卡蒂娅·克拉夫特:火山学家,我们可以一辈子安于一个温暖的角落,也可以尽情享受冒险的火热。Catherine Joséphine"Katia"Krafft(néeConrad; 17 April 1942 – 3 June 1991) and her husband,Maurice Paul Krafft(25 March 1946 – 3 June 1991), wereAlsatianFrenchvolcanologistswho died in apyroclastic flowonMount Unzen, inJapan, on June 3, 1991. The Kraffts were known for being pioneers in filming, photographing and recording volcanoes, often getting within feet oflava flows. Their obituary appeared in theBulletin of Volcanology.[1]Werner Herzog'sdocumentaryInto the Infernohighlights them.


Betty Davis(bornBetty Gray Mabry; July 16, 1944 – February 9, 2022) was an American singer, songwriter, and model. She was known for her controversial sexually-oriented lyrics and performance style, and for being the second wife of trumpeterMiles Davis.[1]HerAllmusicprofile describes her as "a wildly flamboyant funk diva with few equals ... [who] combined the gritty emotional realism ofTina Turner, the futurist fashion sense ofDavid Bowie, and the trendsetting flair of Miles Davis".


Nzingha Mbande(c.1583– 1663) was Queen of theAmbunduKingdoms ofNdongo(1624–1663) andMatamba(1631–1663), located in present-day northernAngola.[1]Born into the ruling family of Ndongo, Nzinga received military and political training as a child, and she demonstrated an aptitude for defusing political crises as an ambassador to thePortuguese Empire. She later assumed power over Ndongo after the death of her father and brother, who both served as kings, and would go on to conquer Matamba. She ruled during a period of rapid growth in theAfrican slave tradeand encroachment of the Portuguese Empire into South West Africa, in attempts to control the slave trade.[2]Nzinga fought for the independence and stature of her kingdoms against the Portuguese[1]in a reign that lasted 37 years.In the years following her death, Nzinga has become ahistorical figurein Angola and in the widerAtlantic Creoleculture. She is remembered for her intelligence, her political and diplomatic wisdom, and her brilliantmilitary tactics.

 4 ) 每个女人都来看!

每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!每个女人都来看!

 5 ) 补一篇评论

提到历史上的传奇女人,你能想到谁呢?

传统意义上的四大美女?亦或是一代女皇武则天?今天为大家带来一些不一样的传奇女性。

相对于男人,人们总是更喜欢去给女性的人生去规划,甚至从出生的一刹那就去安排她的人生道路,规训着她,应该去做这个应该去做那个,告诉她们应该成为什么样的人,但是从来不告诉女性按照自己的想法可以成为什么样的人。

在本动画中,分别用每集3分钟概括了这30位女性的故事,让更多的女性力量被看见,在一定程度上给了女性一定的启发。

看动画之前,我以为会选取的是整个历史上很出名的女性来介绍她们的故事,但看过之后,我发现我错了,有些女性就是并没有那种轰轰烈烈改变着世界,甚至就是我们身边人普通人的经历,但依旧贡献了巨大的能量。

有女皇、留有大胡子的女性,跨性别者,女匪王,无论什么样的女孩子,没有人必须成为你所被要求的样子,看到身为女性的力量,你可以成为你想成为的人呢。

Clémentine Delait

细数这些女性,可以发现这些人并不是全部出生于大富大贵之家,有着特别好的经济背景,她们饱受苦难,甚至天生有着这样或者那样的缺陷,但是都彼此成就了不一样的人生。

即使天生存在着一定的身体上的缺陷,也不是阻碍。安妮特凯勒曼,勇敢争取自己身体的权力,设计出了连体泳衣;半裸甚至裸体出镜,但这有什么值得羞耻的呢,我不禁想到鲁迅先生说到“一见短袖子,立刻想到白臂膊,立刻想到全裸体,立刻想到生殖器,立刻想到性交”,这些是男性的问题而不应该成为女性穿衣权利的桎梏。坦普·葛兰汀因为不会说话,被不断地排斥,幸好她有着爱她的母亲,坚持不懈的培养,无法沟通又如何,一样可以成为著名的动物学家。

Annette Kellerman

当然,也又让我很痛苦的事例,The Shaggs乐队,我无法理解这一集出现的意义,也许随手而为可以创造意想不到的成就,但是在童年时候被父亲逼迫着学习音乐的过程我真的无法接受,而且顺从的接受,直到父亲死亡才结束这一切的生活,这令我觉得恐怖,令我觉得窒息。在当下的环境中,女性不断觉醒的过程中,受到的阻力就是来自父母,父亲作为传统父权的不断压制,母亲则沦为帮凶,突然想到了“毒亲的问题”,对于父亲和母亲还是不同的,作为同样身份的母亲,作为母亲的身份时,她们既是压迫者,也是牺牲者。所以不要怨恨你的母亲,但是不要屈从于你的父亲,如果有一天,你觉醒了,我是赞同大胆反抗父亲的控制的,相信你,可以摆脱这种人生。

ps~推荐上野千鹤子老师这本书

Mae Jemison

最让我喜欢的就是梅·杰米森了吧,不仅是作为女性,而且还是以为黑人女性(对不起给您加那么多的标签),这些经历大概就很传奇了,她不断学习获得了很多学位,第一位成功进入太空的女性,离开NASA后,创立了非盈利的组织,为教育儿童贡献力量,而且还成功在星际迷航中扮演了角色,简直就是想要的都得到的爽文。不止是女性,大概就是每个人的人生就是这样,不断的去尝试,只要坚定信念,就一定能走的很远,不是吗?

而给我另一个认知就是,我们不一定需要婚姻,婚姻也不是女性必须的选择,大概婚姻就是人生的一场赌博,在本就不确定的情况下,对于大多数的我们可以选择,而有的人甚至没有办法选择,索尼塔就是这样的女孩子,强迫的婚姻,但幸运的是她逃了出来,并改变了自己的命运,并不断致力于这方面的斗争。而且每一个女孩子请记住,你们的人生不一定需要男性的参与,正如埃克利,一个人也可以环游世界不是吗?

整部动画,最让我钦佩也痛苦的就是普兰了。以前,印度的种姓制度一直都是从历史书上看到的知识罢了。然而在动画中我看到,她被迫出卖,虽然是名义上的婚姻,但是遭受的却和奴隶没有什么区别,殴打,性侵,虽然被父母接了回去,但流言蜚语却缠绕了这个家庭,被诬告,甚至被警察侵犯,最终被土匪抢走了。本以为这会是结束,但是幸运和不幸同时降临,维克拉姆救了她,但在帮派战争中,她的情人丧生了,她受尽屈辱,在别人的帮助下侥幸逃生了,成立了新的帮派,并一起帮助弱者,最终她主动自首,接受了监禁。后来被无罪释放后,为了帮助被压迫的阶级,她参加竞选,最后却被极端原教旨主义者枪杀。很难想像,她经历了那么多,没有被打败却变得更强大,而且去努力的帮助更多地弱者,她一生都在战斗,是啊,我们没有经历那么多痛苦,但是也要一直战斗不是吗?(这里推荐原型电影)

至于拉达克的故事,我只希望当下的我们保有真正独立思考之精神。

洛芩,阿格诺迪斯这些女性,大胆打破性别迷思,一切都不是男性专属的,什么男性天生都女生强,都是骗鬼的,女性可以拥有同样的权力,甚至可以做的更好呢。这些女性也没有受到年龄的桎梏,灯塔的守护者,看到动画里那个老奶奶冒着雨天去不断的植树;克莱尔自己都六十多了,开始为老年人创造养老之地,只要你想,什么时候都不是很晚的。

Agnodice

Jesselyn Radack

短短三分钟,只能粗略了解这些女性的一生,就已经如此精彩,而对于我们还有着大把的时间去创造,遵从自己内心的信念,婚姻,家庭,社会,年龄,这些都不应该成为你的桎梏,勇敢的出发,请相信你身为女性的力量,它远比你想象的更强大!

 6 ) 女孩,你很好!

作为一个女生,看到这部剧有了极大的触动。小时候自己是一个脱离群体的孩子,一直在为了成为一个人群的中心而努力,然而事与愿违。Temple是一位自闭症患者,但是却在和牛的生活中发现了自己的长处,关心牲畜的生活,提高了产量,为人类生产带来进步。玛格丽特集有一句话“you just have to embrace your singularity”。当代女生追求白瘦美,却不知道这个世界正是因为多样性才如此璀璨,很多女生去整容却没有勇气接受自己的“与众不同”。The Shaggs集里“what if just doing your best is good enough?”也是一种鼓励。短剧集以动画的形式压缩了她们人生的故事,但让我们感受到了传奇之所在。每一个女孩都有着独一无二的经历,她们的传奇也鼓舞了后人去接续,去传承,让女孩勇敢追梦,勇敢接纳自己的与众不同,尽力而为不问结果...

我同样希望自己能和她们一样走出自己的传奇,也祝愿每一个女孩都能勇敢坚强,自信自爱,为梦想努力,为生活尽力,无怨无悔,克服一路的艰难。

 7 ) 那些值得记住的金句,不止说给女性

E1 Annette Kellerman ― Il n'y a pas d'âge pour être fier de son corps

E2 武则天 ― L'ambition, c'est pas réservée aux hommes.

E3 Joséphine Baker ― Dansez, chantez, c'est vital! Agir pour les autres, un devoir.

E4 Nellie Bly ― la vérité dérange, mais c'est le seul moyen de faire bouger les choses.

E5 Leymah Gbowee ― Il est temps que les femmes arrêtent d'être poliment fâchées. C'est quand les femmes s'unissent que les grands changements arrivent.

E6 Temple Grandin ― apprivoiser sa différence, c'est en faire une force.

E7 Naziq Al-Abid ― Rien ne doit arrêter le combat contre les injustices.

E8 Tove Jansson― Si le bonheur, c'était de vivre d'amour et de création.

E9 Margaret Hamilton ― Il faut savoir accepter sa singularité.

E10 Giorgina Reid ― Rien ne résiste à la persévérance.

E11 The Shaggs ― Si faire de son mieux, c'était déjà pas mal?

E12 Mae Jemison ― Je suis une femme, et personne ne m'imposera de frontière. Ne pense jamais qu'un rêve est impossible. Si on y croit, on peut aller loin, infiniment loin.

E13 Peggy Guggenheim ― Quand on sait percevoir le beau,l'art, c'est en faire profiter les autres

E14 Sonita Alizada ― Ce qui compte, c'est trouver le moyen de faire entendre sa voix.

E15 Delia Akeley― Il n'est jamais trop tard pour partir à l'aventure.

E16 Phulan Devi― contre les injustices, il ne faut jamais faire taire la voix de la colère et de l'indignation.

E17 Jesselyn Radack ― le droit à l'information est fondamentale. vouloir la vérité, c'est défier la loi quand il le faut.

E18 Christine Jorgensen― Peu importe sons corps de naissance, chacun est libre de se définir

E19 Thérèse Clerc― Je reste avant tout une femme libre. Sa vie était un combat et une fête jusqu'a la fin de ses jours. Vieillir vieux c'est bien, mais vieillir bien c'est mieux.

E20 Agnodice― il est temps que les femmes reprennent le contrôle de leur corps. Le savoir n'est pas réservé aux hommes, surtout s'il concerne le corps des femmes.

E21 Lozen― La force et la bravoure ne sont pas l'apanage des hommes.

E22 Frances Glessner Lee ― Une grande passion peut créer une petite révolution.

E23 Clémentine Delait― La nature est pleine de surprises pourquoi les cacher?

E24 Hedy Lamarr ― On a le droit d'être belle et d'avoir un cerveau.

E25 "Las Mariposas" ― Contre la violence et le répression, le courage vaincra toujours.

E26 Josephina van Gorkum ― Tout est possible à ceux qui s'aiment à si grande amour.

E27 Cheryl Bridges ― On est bien plus que ce que l'on pense être.

E28 Katia Krafft ― C'est ma vie et le risque en fait partie. On peut rester bien au chaud toute sa vie, ou préférer le feu de l'action.

E29 Betty Davis ― On n'est jamais mieux servi par soi-même. J'ai toujours été guidée par ma spontanéité. La création ne peut accepter la demi-mesure.

E30 Nzinga ― Le pouvoir ne s'hérite pas, mais il se mérite.


DeepL Translation:

E1 Annette Kellerman - There is no age to be proud of your body

E2 武则天 - Ambition is not just for men.

E3 Josephine Baker - Dance, sing, it's vital! Act for others, a duty.

E4 Nellie Bly - the truth is disturbing, but it's the only way to make things happen.

E5 Leymah Gbowee - It's time for women to stop being politely angry. It's when women unite that big changes happen.

E6 Temple Grandin - taming your difference is turning it into strength.

E7 Naziq Al-Abid - Nothing should stop the fight against injustice.

E8 Tove Jansson - If happiness was living on love and creation.

E9 Margaret Hamilton - You have to accept your uniqueness.

E10 Giorgina Reid - Nothing resists perseverance.

E11 The Shaggs - If doing your best wasn't bad enough?

E12 Mae Jemison - I'm a woman, and no one is going to hold me back. Never think a dream is impossible. If you believe in it, you can go far, infinitely far.

E13 Peggy Guggenheim - When you know how to perceive beauty, art is to share it with others

E14 Sonita Alizada - What counts is to find a way to make your voice heard.

E15 Delia Akeley- It's never too late to go on an adventure.

E16 Phulan Devi- Against injustice, never silence the voice of anger and outrage.

E17 Jesselyn Radack- the right to information is fundamental. to want the truth is to defy the law when necessary.

E18 Christine Jorgensen- No matter what body you were born in, you are free to define yourself.

E19 Thérèse Clerc- I remain above all a free woman. Her life was a fight and a party until the end of her days. To age old is good, but to age well is better.

E20 Agnodice - it is time for women to take back control of their bodies. Knowledge is not just for men, especially if it concerns women's bodies.

E21 Lozen- Strength and bravery are not just for men.

E22 Frances Glessner Lee- A great passion can create a small revolution.

E23 Clementine Delait- Nature is full of surprises why hide them?

E24 Hedy Lamarr- We have the right to be beautiful and have a brain.

E25 "Las Mariposas" - Against violence and repression, courage will always win.

E26 Josephina van Gorkum - Everything is possible to those who love each other so much.

E27 Cheryl Bridges - We are more than we think we are.

E28 Katia Krafft - This is my life and risk is part of it. You can stay warm all your life, or you can prefer the heat of the moment.

E29 Betty Davis - You are never better served by yourself. I have always been guided by my spontaneity. Creation cannot accept half measures.

E30 Nzinga - Power is not inherited, but earned.

 短评

太棒了!!!精致有特色的扁平风,流畅的动画表现和视觉语言,很多画面都值得临摹,配色也超级棒。故事就不多赘述了,已经下单了绘本。年度好动画名单上榜!很多故事看得想哭,为了女孩,为了弱者,为了被压迫的人,总有人在奋斗着。

2分钟前
  • 方块子
  • 力荐

B站搜“巾帼不让须眉”。

4分钟前
  • 独角仙
  • 力荐

女性真是有无穷的创造力

5分钟前
  • 🍊
  • 力荐

230410/这么多女人都不出现在历史课本上,难道还不能说明些问题吗?

9分钟前
  • 以腐朽亲吻
  • 力荐

没有特别选取“成功女性”的故事,很多女性是比较“边缘”的,比如修建梯田的灯塔守护者,看完她的生平我由衷觉得“世界上只有一种真正的成功,那就是用自己喜欢的方式度过一生”。有些视频评论说怎么不提这位女性、那位女性,但我觉得这部动画更像是一个引子,展现了女性各种各样的可能性,并引导我们去关注女性故事。如果我小时候接触了这样的动画,或许可以拓宽对自己未来的想象力。

14分钟前
  • 写码高手陆臻
  • 力荐

好棒!期待看到更多的亚洲女性以及中国的女性!

16分钟前
  • 今者吾丧我
  • 力荐

在B站买了会员,但删减九集。何必讷。

21分钟前
  • 千鶴子
  • 推荐

怪不得评分这么高,真的很励志,女性的解放真的不容易,看B站上“消失”了9集,就能窥见一二,真讽刺。

24分钟前
  • 姝聿
  • 力荐

人生太短,可没功夫做别人。

28分钟前
  • 就有够可爱
  • 力荐

哈!哈!每集短小精悍3 mins,《她們的傳奇》迷你小動畫!題材加⭐️⭐️直接買後浪引進那個色彩更鮮明內容更詳細繪本吧!

32分钟前
  • 別有用心美少女
  • 力荐

每集三分钟,一共30集。看完可能没办法记住所有人,但是她们的勇敢、乐观、睿智等等优点都能被深深感受到。简单来说,还是得活出自己。

34分钟前
  • 玉木大河
  • 推荐

感谢豆友推荐,b站可以看到,每集3min,有30集。它告诉我们,女性有无穷的力量!有机会找一找原版漫画!

38分钟前
  • Q
  • 力荐

法国人做女性动画真的太厉害了。最喜欢每集开头每位女性撕破画框,从被定义中跳出来的鲜活样子。

43分钟前
  • 玫瑰天雪地
  • 力荐

动画版有受到篇幅限制,不过依然通俗可爱充满启迪和力量,关键是,欧美女性题材一如既往多元包容,不需要趁机搭载一些家国大义。

44分钟前
  • Lanita
  • 推荐

1.每个成功的女人背后都有一个支持她实现梦想的男人2.如果男人不能帮助你实现梦想,那就踹掉他们,逃离他们3.女性要勇敢,年龄不是限制,有人50岁才开始追寻梦想,100岁梦想成真。

45分钟前
  • 卡夫卡的小屋
  • 推荐

武则天的部分,动画版的简易呈现方式,有一定的教育价值。30位女性的冒险人生

48分钟前
  • EYOJ
  • 推荐

画风明快、转场丝滑、叙述利落,故事里的女性个个鲜艳精彩个个多面立体,启发和激励是多维度的。由于我的孤陋寡闻我还是第一次认识这么多吾辈楷模,又觉得有幸多了一些精神链接。法国似乎拍了挺多类似的科普向动画短片,认识女性力量相信自身潜能一方面什么时候都不晚,另一方面也要竭尽所能从娃娃抓起啊。

49分钟前
  • Meraki
  • 力荐

“真相有时是残酷的,但只有揭露真相才能带来改变。”“当女性团结起来时,真正的变革才会开始。”“你与众不同的地方就是你的优势。”“反对不公正的斗争永远不会结束。”“你只需要接受自己的特别之处。”“我是黑人,我是女性,但谁都别想对我设限。”“与他人分享美本身就是一门艺术。”“什么时候冒险都不晚。”“我们要反抗不公,没人能压制愤怒的呐喊。”“力量和勇气不是男人的专属。”“伟大的爱好可能会引起一场小小的革命。”“暴力与镇压不是勇气的对手。”“我们总是比我们想象的更有潜力。”她们的智慧、勇气、力量和伟大的精神品质都值得人们学习!请来认识一下世界上那些优秀的女性吧!

54分钟前
  • Masducf
  • 力荐

这部动画将改变我的一生:原来一个女人的一生可以如此自由,精彩。

56分钟前
  • 罗罗
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