Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Disney Princesses are Sending the Wrong Message


The animated Disney princess is viewed as an idol to young girls worldwide.  However, these classic films we grew up with aren’t necessarily sending an appropriate message to children.  In these films, the female character is typically dependent, helpless, and her abilities are overlooked in comparison to her appearance.  Princesses like Cinderella, Snow White, Aurora, Belle, and Ariel, to name a few, are beautiful, graceful, obedient, available, and voluptuous; making them valuable to their prince.  The prince is the only hero who accomplishes a virtually impossible task to save the damsel in distress.  But then what?  The princess falls immediately in love with the strong, independent man and they all live happily ever after.  This “happy ending” gives children a false view on life.  Today, women can be successful without a prince charming, they don’t have to wear form fitting dresses that show off cleavage and other assets to attract a man, and they are valuable beyond looks alone.  These animated Disney films have the ability to influence young girls in their childhood into believing that beauty is everything and the only way to find true love.   
 


The 1937 film entitled Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs focuses on the heroine, Snow White, who is pretty, virginal, easily influenced, weak, and motherly.  In the opening scene, the evil queen looks into the magic mirror and asks, “Mirror, mirror on the wall who’s the fairest of them all?”  This famous line proves beauty is the ultimate goal for female characters; which reinforces the claim that women in Disney animated films are only valuable to others if they have beauty and sex appeal.  Furthermore, when Snow White runs away to the little, dirty house and befriends the dwarfs, she takes care of them because of her motherly, feminine instinct.  I found it interesting and almost ironic that Snow White instantly considered the dwarfs as friends because they weren’t tall, strong, and handsome.  Toward the end of the movie, the obedient Snow White eats the apple the evil queen gives her and is put into a deep sleep.  She can only be saved if her prince breaks the spell by kissing her.  Women in these films always seem to be dependent on their handsome princes.  They never have the option of saving themselves or even outsmarting the antagonist in the first place because they don’t have that capability.  Only handsome princes do.


In the 1991 film Beauty and the Beast, Belle, the Disney princess, is slightly more independent than the other princesses.  She enjoys reading; she longs for change and adventure; and she chooses not to marry the hunky Gaston.  It seems as though she could be a role model to young girls, however, when she searches for her father and winds up in a run-down mansion, she becomes trapped by the beast.  The beast terrifies the household and his prisoner, Belle.  He doesn’t officially attack her, but the threat of physical abuse is present.  Belle ends up changing the beast into a gentle, polite, and kind-hearted man because of her sweet-nature and beauty.  She didn’t fall in love with him based on physical attraction, but in the end the beast magically changes into a handsome man giving her the best of both worlds.  This movie sends a dangerous message to young girls.  The story line in this film essentially glorifies an abusive relationship.  She dances with the beast in a glamorous, gold gown; the enchanted household items insist that she can change him; and they live in a mansion and are both physically attracted to each other after the spell is broken.  Belle’s unconditional kind, feminine behavior and the glitzy surroundings enable her to dismiss the rage the beast has toward other people.  Women should be able to leave and not feel trapped if they’re being mentally abused by their significant other.


In Disney’s 1989 film The Little Mermaid, Ariel longs to “live out of these waters…”  The only way she can change from being a mermaid to a human is by giving away her voice to the evil, unattractive Ursula.  She easily gave away her voice without much thought.  The choice that Ariel made makes her appear to be careless, unintelligent, and easily influenced by outside forces.  She gives up her family and friends under the sea for romance with her Prince Eric on land.  Women shouldn’t give up everything they value for a man, but Disney makes it seem acceptable to do so.  In addition, Ariel is viewed as beautiful and sexually attractive.  She wears two shells on her rather large breasts, has a small waistline, and has hips (even when she has a fin and scales covering them).  Ariel’s attire underwater might be too provocative for young girls to see and idolize.  The thin, hourglass figure is the body type that all Disney princesses have.  This enables children to believe that this shape is ideal for women.     


In conclusion, these Disney princesses shouldn’t necessarily be considered role models for young children.  Women in these films are wrapped up in beauty, fashion, and grace not their capabilities and goals besides being a married woman one day.  When little girls view these classic movies, they quite possibly could get the impression that everything comes easy to beautiful, thin women.  Peggy Orenstein, the author of Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Line of Today’s New Girlie-Girl Culture, states that "The hyper-feminine image of a princess in today's world affects our understanding of relationships and gender roles..."  Society needs to be more aware of the messages these animated Disney films are possibly sending to children.

Publication Data

ORENSTEIN, PEGGY. "What’s Wrong With Cinderella?" The New York Times. The New York Times, 24 Dec. 2006. Web. 20 Feb. 2012. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/24/magazine/24princess.t.html?pagewanted=all.

Maio, Kathy. "Women, Race & Culture in Disney's Movies." Women, Race and Culture in Disney Movies. 19 June 1999. Web. 20 Feb. 2012. http://www.newint.org/easier-english/Disney/diswomen.html.

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4 comments:

  1. This post reminds me of a lot of movies directed at little girls. Lately I have been watching a large amount of barbie movies. Every single Barbie movie follows the same story line. A beautiful young girl has to fight off some man who is desperate for her love. As she tries to flee from the desperate man,there is always some obstacle in her way. As she struggles to overcome these obstacles, she meets an attractive man who falls in love with her, and they join forces to defeat the stalker. In the end, Barbie marries her prince charming. Barbie also has a figure which is not realistic to the proportions of the typical woman. I think little girls watching these movies reinforce the stereotypical gender roles too. Your post was really fun to read and compare all of the similarities between the Disney Princess. Did you feel that the newer princess from the Princess and the Frog is also hyper-feminine?

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  2. I think Mulan would be a great role model. She's independent, selfless, strong, do not have dependency toward men, showed a different side of femininity, and not your typical damsel-in-distress like other princesses are.

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  4. Sabrina -

    This is a great post. In it you really stuck a balance between describing the plot of the films and analyzing them to support your thesis. Nice work.

    - Ruth

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