Here is Snow White as she may well have turned out after we closed the book on her particular fairytale.
I
went on Today last week to talk about the Disney Princesses and how
they can set little girls up for profound disappointment when they grow
up and….
…eventually discover that there IS no Prince Charming who is going
to come to their rescue on a white horse. Girls? You have to be
prepared to save yourselves.
[thanks for this pic GlitterMixedWithRockAndRoll]
I've
written about this before and to those of you with daughters older than
about 3, my revelation that the Disney stories are in fact a sad tale
of what it means to be female will be nothing new. You've no doubt been
watching the DVDs and reading the books for long enough that the
messages may barely register anymore.
But my daughter is 3 and for
the past few months, with NO encouragement from me, in some form of
weird genetic or social conditioning phenomenon, she has become
obsessed with Cinderella and Snow White and Sleeping Beauty and Beauty
and the Beast and all the other stories like that which make me want to
claw my own face off. The messages – both visual and metaphorical – are
SOOOOO BAD that I genuinely despair.
Pixar is just about to
release their 12 film. It's called 'Up" and it's about an
Asian-American boy. ALL the Pixar films have been about little boys and
they've just announced the 13th will be about a girl. Guess what she
is? A BLOODY PRINCESS.
Karl played devil's advocate in our
interview and said that every girl is 'daddy's little princess' which
is fine but I sometimes fear we're raising a generation of entitled
little girls who grow up to be Paris Hilton – the grown up human
princess. Or have I just had too much Panadol today?
I used
to think people who complained about how they thought Barbie and the
Disney Princesses were bad for girls were over-reacting. That's
because I had A SON. What did I know? There aren't a whole lot of bad
psychological messages in Thomas The Tank (are there?).
Top Comments
Mia- im twenty years old and was raised in the 90's when disney princesses were really coming into their own. I LOVED it. I was so desperate to be the little mermaid with her long red hair and ability to burst into song. I had barbies and fairies and a bridal dress which was worn often.
15 years later, im a university student with a high grade point average and im a committed feminist. I read everything i can and can't wait to go into the publishing industry one day- i find your story incredibly inspirational.
The moral? It's okay for kids to have fantasy, to have play. We work it out, we realise how life works, and how the most amazing parts of being a woman have nothing to do with your figure or being rescued by a prince. I am proud my mother raised me to let me enjoy those fun things when i was a kid, but also made sure i knew how the real world worked, and let me read lots of books.
It's going to be okay- disney is not the enemy.
There are so many things wrong with the messages Disney sends to our children. It's not just the Princess concept (or the pervasive marketing). Here's our reasoning on why Disney is COMPLETELY banned from our house. (And we have four girls.)
http://www.sparklingadventu...