Yellowjackets Today

: Jackie, the popular "queen bee," struggles because her skills are tied to a society that no longer exists. Conversely, Shauna finds a brutal utility in the wild that she suppressed in suburban New Jersey.

The show aggressively disrupts gender expectations. Critics from Taylor & Francis highlight how the characters are inherently contradictory: capable of deep empathy and extreme cruelty. Trauma, Leadership, and Survival in Yellowjackets S3 Yellowjackets

Yellowjackets serves as a grim inversion of the "girl power" narratives of the 1990s. By stranding a champion high school soccer team in the Canadian wilderness, the series examines what happens when societal structures—replete with their specific expectations of feminine behavior—are stripped away. The show's dual-timeline structure illustrates that the "wilderness" is not just a physical location, but a psychological state that continues to haunt the survivors decades later. : Jackie, the popular "queen bee," struggles because

In the wilderness, the social currency of the "real world" becomes bankrupt. Critics from Taylor & Francis highlight how the

: To manage the terror of starvation and isolation, the girls develop a "wilderness religion". As noted by critics on The Revealer , these rituals serve to offload individual guilt onto a collective, supernatural "It"—allowing them to survive the unthinkable by framing it as a sacrifice to a higher power.