Topic > Feminist Theories in Harriet Martineau's Sakul Ga And...

Kim Joo-Won has strong feelings for the feisty stuntman, even though he's not her type. Joo-Won tried to put Ra-Im out of his mind because Ra-Im doesn't have a high status and isn't even rich. Another person who thinks this way was Kim Joon Won's mom, who hated Ra-Im. Kim Joon Won's mom sees Ra-Im the same way as her son. He even paid Ra-Im to walk away from Kim Joon Won because she wasn't good enough for him. And Kim Joo-Won didn't do things similar to what this mother did to Ra-Im, there was a scene about halfway through the movie where he was ashamed to see her because she was using a rip beg, where old clothes were found . There, he gave her a makeover so that she looked upper class. Since then, Ra-Im tries his best to ignore Joo-Won because he knows that Joo-Wan belongs to a higher social level than him. He still thinks that the lower class should never be mixed with the upper class and that they don't belong together. In conclusion, when examining feminist theory using the film Family of Crows and Secret Garden, women are measured at different levels, mostly at a lower level than men. I also noticed the pattern in these two films that the more people hold to tradition the more they believe that lower class women don't fit in with upper class men. I see this idea in my Korean and Thai drama, women almost