The Queen was jealous of Snow White due to the fact that Snow White was fairer than she was. This exemplifies how women may constantly plot up against one another to claim the trait they feel rightly belongs to them. The Queen does everything in her power to kill Snow White so that she may become the fairest in the land. When she finds out that her hired huntsman did not complete the task of stabbing Snow White’s heart, she takes measures into her own hands First, she disguises herself as an old woman selling pottery and bodices. Snow White let's her in, only to have the Queen lace her bodice too tight to the point of suffocating her. The dwarves come home to see that she is unconscious and unlaces her and Snow White awakens and breathes regularly. Meanwhile, inside the palace the Queen looks at the mirror and asks the question as she did numerous times, “Mirror Mirror who is the fairest of them all?” The mirror answers truthfully and still answers Snow White, beyond the mountains with the seven dwarves is still a thousand times fairer than you.” This angers the queen immensely, thus for the second time she goes to the dwarves cottage in an attempt to kill Snow White. At this point, with the assistance of witchcraft the queen creates a poisoned comb and then disguises herself as a different elder woman and walks …show more content…
While it is important to have competition, what is more important is to be a humble and hard-worker. In Walt Disney’s version of Snow White, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the dwarfs symbolize the common working man both in modern times as well as before, during, and after World War II and the Great Depression. The dwarves work in mines just like most men would do in the 1930’s. The dwarves exemplify of what it truly means to work hard. They show us today in this modern era that if you truly want something you have to “pull yourself by your own boot straps” and work for it. The film reminds us that once again you must start from scratch and work your way