Acceptance of Queer Identities in Disney

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For this engagement essay the article Mean Ladies: Transgenders Villains in Disney Films by Amanda Putnam and the chapter “Someday My Prince Will Come”: Disney, the Heterosexual Imaginary and Animated Films by Carrie L. Cokely will summarized, analyzed, and engaged with using the Queer analytical framework.
I chose these two articles because I felt that they played very well off of each other, touching on very similar topics. Putnam's (2013) focus was on Disney villains and how these characters “gender-bend”, possibly giving them transgendered identities. Putnam's (2013) analysis focuses on the characters in The Lion King, Aladdin, Pocahontas, Cinderella, and a few other Disney films. Cokey (2005) focuses on the Disney prince and princesses, speaking about heterosexuality and it's organization of gender. The focus of the Cokey (2005) article is on the characters in Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Pocahontas. I felt that in reading the articles that Cokely (2005) would have been a wonderful introduction article to Putnam (2013). As Putnam (2013) states, “As we already know, most of the heroes and heroines of the beloved Disney film franchise are hyper-heterosexual” (p. 147), which is specifically what Cokely (2005) describes – the falling in love, getting married, and living happily ever after in regards to gender organization. Putnam (2013) then speaks about the contrast to this, showing how many of the “villains display transgendered attributes” (p. 147).
I found “Someday My Prince Will Come” to be a very interesting and enlightening article, sometimes when watching Disney movies at face value, it is easy to miss just how heterosexually driven these movies are. Many of the Disney movi...

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...a and the cause of violence against LGBTIQ persons. I am so glad that articles, such as Putnam's and Cokely's, deconstruct Disney and lift the vial that Disney has placed on so many of it's viewers. I hope that articles such as these will change Disney films, making them more accepting of gender identities and sexual identities that fall off of the spectrum.

Works Cited

Cokely, C.I. (2005). “Someday My Prince Will Come”: Disney, the heterosexual imaginary, and animal film. In C. Ingraham (Ed.), Thinking straight: The power, the promise, and the paradox of heterosexuality (pp. 167-181). New York, NY: Routledge.
Putnam, A. (2013). Mean ladies: Transgendered villains in Disney films. In J. Cheu (Ed.), Diversity in Disney films: Critical essays on race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and disability (pp. 147-162). Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company Inc., Publishers.

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