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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/boy_sitting_barefoot_and_hatless_by_john_sell_cotman.jpg]]
2->''"One more coin and I can buy a pair of shoes."''
3-->-- '''Beggars''', ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'' [[note]][[GameplayAndStorySegregation They keep saying this no matter how many coins you give them.]][[/note]]
4
5A character appears barefoot as a sign of their poverty. Usually, the camera will linger on their feet to emphasize the lack of shoes. Bonus points if they are shown walking in the snow and shivering from the cold. A common variation includes a shot of them looking at a pair of new shoes with longing. Often used to make the character seem like [[TheWoobie a woobie.]]
6
7Originally, nobody wore shoes until humans began moving into cooler climates, and then shoes were only worn when required by the weather. In the last thousand years, shoes gained prevalence through their association with status. Making shoes requires skill and wearing them meant you were above such things as [[TooImportantToWalk walking on the ground]]. Thus those who wore shoes were the nobility, and those who aspired to be nobility (this is also how [[http://www.myseveralworlds.com/2007/07/11/suffering-for-beauty-graphic-photos-of-chinese-footbinding/ foot binding became]] [[http://www.neatorama.com/2010/07/07/the-bygone-practice-of-foot-binding-in-china/ so popular in China]]). Urbanization is another factor; going barefoot in a pastoral setting is one thing, but cobblestone streets can cut and abrade one's feet severely. These are the same factors that led to the development of the horseshoe.
8
9It may seem strange nowadays, but being barefoot is entirely natural and was once completely normal in all cultures. While many cultures have yet to fully adopt the idea that walking barefoot is somehow shameful, those that never wear shoes have shrunk to small and usually isolated communities. Some cultures, such as the [[UsefulNotes/NewZealand Maori]], have a strong historical and social emphasis on walking barefoot and Maori schools often require children to not wear shoes.
10
11PrefersGoingBarefoot may be a result of this if the character manages to get out of their poverty, or remain in poverty but claim to enjoy being barefoot anyway. A SisterTrope to BankruptcyBarrel, HoboGloves and PauperPatches. Compare EarthyBarefootCharacter, BarefootSage, BarefootLoon, MagicalBarefooter, and UndeadBarefooter.
12----
13!!Examples
14
15[[foldercontrol]]
16
17[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
18* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'':
19** Several shinigami from the poorest districts of the Rukongai grew up barefoot because of the poverty in which they lived, including: Rukia and Renji (both from District 78), Yachiru (from District 79) and Kenpachi (from District 80). In the anime, Ikkaku is included in this, although the manga never confirms whether this is true or not.
20** Becomes a plot point during the final arc: The denizens of Soul Society's worst districts are disappearing en masse, leaving only footprints, including some shoe prints. [[spoiler:It's revealed that people who live within Districts 60-80 are so poverty stricken, none have been known to wear shoes for 550 years. This clues in [[AwesomenessByAnalysis Lieutenant Kira]] to the fact that the initial conclusion that villagers killed each other is wrong, and in reality, entire villages are being slaughtered by Shinigami. Thanks to Kira's revelation, it's discovered that, because a huge number of hollows were annihilated by Quincies, [[MadScientist Mayuri's]] men comitted mass murder to avoid a pan-dimensional disaster that could destroy entire worlds: killing spirit-dwelling villagers counter-balanced the destroyed hollows in a case of BalancingDeathsBooks.]]
21* Naturally, ''Manga/BarefootGen''. Given that it takes place in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, many characters are unable to afford shoes but others, such as Gen, do not wear shoes except to school. Japan has a long tradition associated with being barefoot that is sadly dwindling in the face of Western influences.
22* ''Manga/ChildrenOfTheWhales'': Many, if not most of the inhabitants on the [[MobileCity Mud Whale]] go barefoot. There's less than 500 people on the Mud Whale and they largely have a subsistence life, living off of salvage found in the desert and the Mud Whale's own farms.
23* [[TheIllegal Taro Maria Sekiutsu]] in ''Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'' is portrayed as this with socks ''and'' shoes. Even after the others in the class try and get her into a InstantCosplaySurprise or other normal outfits actually wearing socks, shoes or both, it gives her vertigo because she has never worn them before.
24* ''Manga/InuYasha'': Due to the feudal setting, many background characters are poverty-stricken villagers. The cast, however, are either shoe-wearers or not, with Rin bein introduced as this trope before being saved by Sesshoumaru, whereupon she joins the rest of the shoeless cast.
25* Subverted by L from ''Manga/DeathNote''. L doesn't normally wear shoes unless he's outdoors, in which case he'll wear a pair of beat-up old sneakers. (Untied, of course, to be removed at a moment's notice.) Everyone at To-Oh University thinks L is just a poor student who's there on a [[ScholarshipStudent scholarship]]...but it turns out L is neither a student nor poor. (On the contrary, he's a member of the FictionFiveHundred.) [[TheHedonist L]] just PrefersGoingBarefoot.
26* ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'': A few cases are seen in the series through the cast's tragic backstories, the most emotionally charged being Kanao's past as she lived in extreme misery with abhorrent parents who physically abused all of their children, many of them to death. Other than Kanao, there was Zenitsu who lived as a wandering orphan when he was little, the orphan children Gyomei raised when he was just a monk, and so on.
27* {{Invoked}} in ''Anime/MichikoAndHatchin''. Hatchin briefly does a self-imposed version of this in "Like a Frantic Pinball," when she refuses to wear a pair of stolen shoes until she can properly pay for them.
28* ''Anime/PrincessSarah'': In Episode 23, Sarah bought five loaves of bread and gave all but one to a girl who's even poorer and hungrier than she is. The other girl's lack of shoes is one of the clues to her level of poverty.
29* Averted in ''Anime/TheStoryOfPerrine'': When one of Perrine's short boots breaks due to overuse, she ''doesn't'' go barefoot since she works in a factory and it'd be ''extremely'' unsafe. She first ties it up with a rudimentary cord, then makes a hemp sole for it, and after saving up some francs she gets enough supplies to make both a pair of shoes and a camisole.
30* In the ''Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics's'' version of ''The Old Woman in the Woods'', the protagonist is a cute girl who isn't wearing any shoes despite being a part of a royal caravan, signifying her "position" as a mere maid among all the {{upper class twit}}s.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Fairy Tales]]
34* "Literature/{{Tattercoats}}": The titular heroine is too poor to afford decent clothes, let alone shoes. She walks around barefoot the whole time.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Fan Works]]
38* ''Fanfic/StillStandInTheSun'': After escaping from the Waterbender Prison, Katara's only option for obtaining new clothes to replace her prison smock is to steal from the Fire Nation military outposts that she raids, as she's not willing to attack civilians. Given that she's only in her early teens, it's unlikely that there are any footwear belonging to soldiers that are her size for her to wear.
39* ''Fanfic/DannyPhantomStranded'': It's noted in Chapter 12 of "Entranced" that Beatrice's Puck-imposed poverty reached a level where she no longer has shoes.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
43* In Creator/{{Disney}}'s ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood1973'', the rabbit family exemplify both this trope and the BarefootCartoonAnimal.
44* ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'': The titular character, being a poor thief, is barefoot until he becomes a prince.
45* Esmeralda from ''WesternAnimation/{{The Hunchback of Notre Dame|Disney}}'' is a poor Romani girl who runs around barefoot. At the end of the film, she falls in love with the clearly wealthy-looking Captain of the Guard, Phoebus, and in the sequel she gains shoes.
46* Inverted in ''WesternAnimation/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'': The hero is a very poor archaeologist from the surface world who wears shoes, while his love interest is a wealthy but barefoot Atlantean princess. At the end of the film, the two marry, and as a result ''he'' ends up barefoot instead while said princess, er ''[[TheHighQueen queen]]'' gains sandals, which are concealed by her dress.
47* ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'' from the self-titled film wears the typical mountain man outfit, appearing barefoot with tattered overalls.
48* Héctor in ''WesternAnimation/{{Coco}}'' "lives" in the slums of the Land of the Dead with the souls whose pictures aren't on their families' ofrendas, and wears tattered rags and no shoes. [[spoiler:Once he is reunited with his family, he is given a handsome pair of Rivera-made dress shoes.]]
49%% Needs context * ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicRiddle'': Cindy, except in her dream sequence.
50* ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'': Miriam and the majority of the Hebrew slaves are this. Very few of them, such as Aaron, wear sandals (and even then, Aaron went barefoot in his childhood).
51* ''WesternAnimation/CinderellaJetlagProductions'': During her time as her stepfamily's slave, Cinderella's only shoes are those the Fairy Godmother turns into glass slippers and she goes barefoot between the ball and the moment the Prince brings the slipper he found. The step-family doesn't seem to notice or care she suddenly went barefoot.
52* In ''WesternAnimation/DotAndTheKangaroo'', it is possible that Dot's family cannot afford shoes for her, hence why she is barefoot. This goes hand-in-hand with PrefersGoingBarefoot as, in the sequels, Dot never wears shoes, at least not in animated form, that is.
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
56* The martial arts movie ''Film/TheBareFootedKid'' enforces this trope. When the protagonist, a penniless drifter looking for a job in the big city shows up for the first time, he's shown wandering the streets barefoot, and spends much of the film shoeless. When he gets a stable job as a martial arts instructor, the film deliberately focuses on the cloth shoes he received and the overjoyed look on his face.
57* ''Film/{{Glory}}'': This is the case for many of the black enlistees to the 54th MA Volunteer Infantry, and the {{Jerkass}} quartermaster thinks it's funny to claim that his armory has no shoes to spare when he's clearly living off the fat of his riches. Worse, a few that do have shoes, like Silas, haven't washed them out in ages and [[{{Squick}} thus have gained nasty infections and blisters]]. Naturally, the whole regiment celebrates once fresh and new shoes are finally provided for the volunteers.
58* In ''Film/TheBarefootContessa'', part of Maria Varga's {{Backstory}} is that she grew up too poor to afford shoes. However, by the time she reaches adulthood, [[PrefersGoingBarefoot she comes to enjoy going barefoot]].
59* ''Film/LouisianaStory'': Alexander is a poor Cajun living in a cabin in the Louisiana swamps. He's always going around barefoot.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Folklore]]
63* ''Myth/JuanBobo'': Juan is a poor, rural Puerto Rican boy who usually runs around without shoes.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Literature]]
67* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', the protagonist's family is relatively well off for a farmer family and can afford shoes. However, the palace beauticians complain that going barefoot when he was younger gave Jerin callouses on his feet.
68* In ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfTomSawyer'', Tom envies Huckleberry Finn for not having to wear shoes. Tom doesn't seem to realize it's because Huck doesn't have any shoes, or even parents to make him put them on if he did. Not that bare feet are really a sign of poverty, as Tom and many of his classmates only wear shoes to church when weather requires them to, and Tom thinks a new boy overdressed when he wears new clothes, a necktie, and shoes on a Friday.
69* Creator/EnidBlyton's ''Literature/TheCastleOfAdventure'' features a poor village girl who never wears shoes. Gifted her first pair, she keeps them, delighted - and wears them around her neck.
70* In the short story "The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes", an orphan girl is so poor she only has one shoe. When a wealthy man gives her a pair of shoes she's so happy she goes about telling everyone that now she has two shoes, earning that nickname. ("Goody" being a then-standard shortening of "Goodwife," that is, Miss.)
71* Several illustrations of ''Literature/LesMiserables'' feature this trope, including the most famous one [[http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/99/Ebcosette.jpg/250px-Ebcosette.jpg centering on Cosette.]] Which is actually a mistake: in the book, emphasis is put on the fact that Cosette has no socks even in Winter, but she does wear clogs. However, her mother Fantine ''was'' found wandering barefoot in the streets as a child.
72* In ''Little House in Brookfield'' (the first book in "The Caroline Years," a prequel series to the ''Literature/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'' books and about Laura Ingalls' mother growing up) Caroline's oldest sister goes to church barefoot one day because the family is too poor to buy her new shoes and the old ones pinch her feet something terrible. She thinks her new long dress will cover up her shoeless feet, and she's right for most of the time but eventually gets caught. Her parents are not pleased.
73* ''Literature/TheLittleMatchGirl'' is barefoot out in the freezing winter, as a result of AbusiveParents. She actually had slippers on when she left home, but they used to belong to her mother, so they were too big for her, and she lost them while running across the street.
74* In ''Literature/{{Milkweed}}'', Misha and the other orphans claim everyone is so poor that they check dead corpses for shoes.
75* Juana in Creator/JohnSteinbeck's ''Literature/ThePearl''.
76* In ''Literature/TheGrapesOfWrath'', a tractor driver mentions that his youngest kid never had any shoes.
77* ''Literature/JudysJourney'' is a children's novel about a family of migrant farm workers. Judy and her siblings have no shoes, and on the rare occasions where Judy can briefly attend school, she has to do so barefoot. She is embarrassed.
78* Walter Cunningham in ''Literature/ToKillAMockingbird''. As a result of going barefooted in barnyards, he also gets hookworms. Scout notes that plenty of the farm kids wear shoes the first day of school and discard them until it gets cold.
79* In ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'', Creator/NealStephenson makes a point of bringing up how the foot structure of the natives who capture Goto Dengo implies that they have never worn shoes. This helps contrast their savagery and poverty to his more civilized expectations.
80* In the Israeli short story ''Images from Elementary''[[note]]"Elementary" here means "1st through 8th grades"[[/note]], which takes place in the early years of UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}, the protagonist, a [[UsefulNotes/{{Judaism}} Jewish]] immigrant from UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}, protests his teacher saying (with some racist undertones) that UsefulNotes/{{Egypt}}ian farmers don't wear shoes because of this, explaining that while they are in fact poor, the real reason they don't wear shoes is that [[PrefersGoingBarefoot they find shoes restricting and uncomfortable]]. He continues and argues that (predominantly [[AllJewsAreAshkenazi Ashkenazi]]) ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibbutz kibbutzniks]]'' don't usually wear shoes either, and asks his teacher if it means they're poor too. The teacher, faced with the intense fervour he argued with, backs down and tells the protagonist, "You win. You win!"
81* In the ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' story "The Sign of Four", the [[BakerStreetRegular Baker Street Irregulars]], a group of orphaned {{Street Urchin}}s who help Holmes and Watson, are described as having "naked feet".
82* In ''Literature/{{Banco}}'', Papillon's GirlOfMyDreams, Rita, was raised by her single mother and was the youngest of six children in a poor neighborhood of Tangiers. She roamed as a barefoot StreetUrchin until she was ten years old.
83* The Dendarii Mountain village of Silvy Vale in ''[[Literature/VorkosiganSaga Memory]]'' is fighting hard to get ''out'' of poverty, but most of the children in the two-room schoolhouse are barefoot. So is the teacher, Harra Csurik.
84* African teenager Frangie Marr from the book ''Literature/SoldierGirls'' by Michael Grant. She's outgrown her last pair of shoes and can't afford to wear any until she arrives at military boot camp (Frangie notes the irony in that name). It's stated how utterly humiliating going barefoot in public is for her.
85--> "A short girl with no shoes. Probably looks thirteen."
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
89* In ''Series/SpartacusBloodAndSand'', all the slave characters are BarefootCaptives almost all the time, except for the gladiators when fighting in the arena.
90* In ''Series/ThievesOfTheWood'', Anne Marie is a barefoot orphan.
91* Mentioned repeatedly in the ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'' show, as Pa says "I can barely afford shoes for my own girls" when he gets frustrated. Having shoes was considered a big step up for the family in the original books as well.
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93
94[[folder:Music]]
95* Music/TheDecemberists: "I am a chimbley, a chimbley sweep / No bed to lie, no shoes to hold my feet..."
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
99* In ''ComicStrip/LilAbner'', many Dogpatch residents seem too poor to afford shoes. Daisy Mae is almost always barefoot.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
103* Velvet [=McIntyre=] because WrestlingDoesntPay. Her boots were stolen in real life so she just decided to wrestle barefoot.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Religion]]
107* [[DiscussedTrope Discussed]] in Literature/TheTalmud (Shabbat 129a): "A person should sell the roof beams of his house to buy shoes for his feet." In traditional Jewish law, going shoeless, even indoors, is considered undignified; it's permissible only on major fast days and when in mourning.
108** In the Literature/BookOfExodus, there was a law that stated that if a man died without any [[HeirClubForMen male heirs]], his widow was to marry his brother, and the brother would [[LineageComesFromTheFather carry on the family line]] for him via the first son he had with her. If the man refused the marriage, she was to publicly humiliate him ([[FamilyHonor and all]] [[SinsOfOurFathers his descendants and relatives]]) by removing his sandals, spitting on him, and publicly declaring that he refused to do his duty to his family and society. Because of the shame, it would lead to ostracism and financial ruin for him, and he would [[OnceDoneNeverForgotten never live it down]].
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:Theatre]]
112* It's not uncommon for costume design in ''Theatre/{{Road}}'' to include this, particularly with characters like Molly, Chantal and Joey.
113* The 1946 production of ''Theatre/{{Showboat}}'' inserted a ballet for barefoot African-American dancers titled "No Shoes."
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Video Games]]
117* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'': Hapi is a resident of Skopp City who was born with a [[NonHumanHead sewer cover for a head]], and lives in the sewers barefoot after getting shunned enough to resorting asking for food from below.
118* In ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'', the [[TerroristsWithoutACause GLA]]'s WorkerUnit is a downtrodden Peasant whose response to orders may be a plaintive "Can I have some shoes, please?" The ''Zero Hour'' expansion added an upgrade that gives the poor saps some shoes, which provides a modest bonus to their movement speed.
119* Shion Yorigami from ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' spin-off ''VideoGame/TouhouHyouibanaAntinomyOfCommonFlowers'' is a goddess of poverty whose [[TheJinx powers of bringing misfortune to others]] extend to herself and so goes barefoot to go along with her drab clothing patched up with ''debt papers''.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Web Comics]]
123* Katia Managan from ''Webcomic/{{Prequel}}'' starts out barefoot and without a single Septim to her name. Most of her outfits have been supplied to her by others, not purchased herself, and they don't always include boots. Factor in how often she loses all the clothes off her back, and she ends up spending most of the comic barefoot. Like the rabbit family from ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood1973'', she combines this trope with BarefootCartoonAnimal.
124* The nonmagical street children introduced in chapter two of ''Webcomic/NeverSatisfied'' have never worn shoes in-comic. Even Sasha has the bare minimum of foot protection in the form of wrappings.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Web Original]]
128* Marcia Shyneet from ''Roleplay/WeAreOurAvatars'' doesn't have a stable source of income. She only keeps one set of clothes but they don't come with matching shoes or socks.
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Western Animation]]
132* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'', Cartman laments: "My momma's so poor she walks down the street with one shoe on... and when people say, 'Did you lose a shoe?' she says, 'No, I found one.'"
133* ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'': In "Pizza Party", during the flashback to Mina as a peasant, she is missing one shoe, just as she would later after losing her mind.
134* ''WesternAnimation/TotallySpies'' has a briefly downplayed moment of this trope mixed with a possible FetishRetardant in "[[ItMakesSenseInContext Evil GLADIS, MUCH?]]" when [[spoiler: Mandy is sitting with bare feet on the sidewalk [[AlasPoorVillain because her mother sold the boots she and Clover have been fighting over all episode.]]]] [[note]]Though Sam says that it's 87 degrees, so the snow she's sitting in clearly fake.[[/note]] [[spoiler: It's hard not to feel sorry despite her usual QueenBee status, so Clover decides to give her the boots [[ItMakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext that she stole from a stranger]] before pulling out a ''[[KickTheDog better]]'' [[AllWomenLoveShoes pair out of her shopping bag]].]]
135* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': The "Farmverse" AlternateUniverse version of Finn who appears in the "Finn the Human"/"Jake the Dog" two-parter is a barefoot farmboy in ragged trousers.
136* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'': In the "Book Of Ages" arc, after Shendu rewrites history so the demons rule the Earth, Viper goes from a posh ClassyCatBurglar to a barefoot slave girl dressed in rags.
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Real Life]]
140* TruthInTelevision, logically. Poverty at the level of hand to mouth (or worse) doesn't leave money for things like shoes.
141* Members of various monastic orders swear oaths of poverty, restricting them to only a tiny set of possessions--shoes often not included.
142** Other orders decided to {{take a third option}} and allowed shoes -- these shoes being VERY simple sandals.
143* The myth of Saint Pius X has him invoking the trope in his childhood. He was a CountryMouse and his parents were in charge of a tiny village's post office; young Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto (his birth name) didn't want to have them buy him shoes if it wasn't truly needed, so to make said shoes last longer he'd walk to school barefoot and put them back on when he arrived there, then viceversa.
144* Paraguayan goalkeeper [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jose_Luis_Chilavert José Luis Chilavert]] was born in a quite poor family from Luque (a city near the capital, Asunción), and is said to have gone mostly barefoot until he was around 7 years old.
145* Historically, [[BarefootCaptives prisoners and slaves have often been kept barefoot]], as described on the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barefoot#Historical_aspects Other Wiki.]]
146* Many armies in periods up until the most modern ages of warfare often involved shoes as a major supply issue, seeing as how when you marched nearly everywhere you ended up wearing out shoes extremely fast. How successful and well-organized you were could be seen in if your men had shoes or not.
147** The "Your mother wears army/combat boots" came to be due to this trope, as it actually means "YourMom is so poor, [[CampFollower she has to prostitute herself to soldiers so she can wear shoes]]".
148* One explanation for the stereotype of people from the DeepSouth being stupid is that many Southerners going barefoot due to the climate/poverty made them easy targets for hookworm infections, which can cause mental development issues and anemia.
149[[/folder]]

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