Disney Princesses: Feminism and Gender Roles Debate

523 Words2 Pages

Peggy Orenstein has been very popular around the literary world, writing books, and publishing for many popular magazines such as O: The Oprah Magazine, Vogue, Elle, Glamour, New York Times and many more. She mainly focuses on today’s society issues such as topics that affect women and girls. Orenstein’s article originally published in the New York Times in 2006, “What’s Wrong with Cinderella?” is the article I chose from the book, The Conscious Reader (page.64-74). Disliking the princess industry, and the impact they have to young girls and forcing gender roles, Peggy Orenstein writes this article as a feminist mother who has concerns about what it will do to her three year old daughter.

Orenstein does not support ideas that force gender on girls, especially Disney for starting the so well known “Princess” line. On page sixty-five this mother states: “I have been taken by surprise by the princess craze and the girlie-girl culture that has risen around it”. Disney’s royal rubric which consists of nine of its female princess characters, has been the fastest-growing brand, taking in $3 billion in 2006. You can find anything Princess now, the number of products in existence are overwhelming. All things princess, sparkles, pink and tulle became a trend worldwide for little girls. Although, girls do not have to just like princesses, what if she wanted to play with trucks and do sports instead? Most girls do like all the …show more content…

In the end all she hopes for is that her daughter will not follow the percentage of girls who think they have to be “perfect” and who feel pressure. Instead she wants her daughter to be a successful young lady who faces every obstacle like a champ and ends up being whoever and whatever she wants to be without limitations do to

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