The Discourse on Disney Princess Culture

1765 Words4 Pages

Disney is one of the biggest empires in the world. It is a brand that everyone knows about whether they invest in it or not. According to the Forbes Most Valuable Brands list, Disney ranks number seventeen in the world—behind popular brands like Apple and Microsoft and above Wal-Mart. The Disney Empire is a business, a brand that can be found almost everywhere, even in the Dollar Store. The brand’s accessibility is what makes it easy for children to become consumers. The consumerism of princess culture is what I will focus on in this essay, discussing the impact Disney’s Princesses have on young girls and their identity, and how popular culture discourse is beginning to fight back against the empire.
Children become consumers of the Disney brand at a young age, even without parental encouragement. Peggy Orenstein’s New York Times article, “What’s Wrong with Cinderella,” describes the experience of having a daughter in a princess culture/Disney world. Orenstein is not shy about proclaiming her opposition to the Princess brand and what it teaches girls. Orenstein also shows her helplessness in shielding her own daughter from the brand. During a trip to the store, Orenstein’s daughter “point[s] out Disney Princess Band-Aids, Disney Princess paper cups…lip balm…pens…crayons [and] notebooks—all cleverly displayed at the eye level of a 3-year-old trapped in a shopping cart.” Disney strategically places merchandise to capture children as consumers. Children buy into the merchandise and also the “fun of the films themselves and the ‘fairytale’ lives of the characters in them…[and they] come very close to, at least materially, recreating those ‘lives’ in their own living rooms” by owning these products (Lacroix 217). The material aspec...

... middle of paper ...

...enstein, Peggy. "What's Wrong With Cinderella?" The New York Times. 24 Dec. 2006. Web.
01 Dec. 2013.
Orr, Lisa. “‘Difference That Is Actually Sameness Mass-Reproduced’": Barbie Joins the Princess
Convergence.” Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 1.1 (2009): 9-30. Project MUSE. Web. 1 Dec. 2013.
Stephanie. "Reasons Why I’m Not Supporting Disney’s Frozen." Web Blog. The Feminist
Fangirl. Tumblr. Web. 03 Dec. 2013.
"To Flatten A Heroine: Artist Puts Disney Princess Filter on 10 Real Life Female Role Models."
Women You Should Know. 31 Oct. 2013. Web. 20 Nov. 2013.
Wohlwend, Karen E. "Damsels in Discourse: Girls Consuming and Producing Identity Texts
Through Disney Princess Play." Reading Research Quarterly 44.1 (2009): 57-83. Academic Search Premier. Web. 16 Mar. 2009.
"The World's Most Valuable Brands." Forbes. Forbes Magazine, Nov. 2013. Web. 02 Dec. 2013.

Open Document