Preview

Fairy Tales

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1890 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Fairy Tales
Alexis Zora
Professor Motaleb
English 115
July 31, 2014
Fairy Tales: Old VS Modern While Disney developed a formulaic approach to fairy tales (basic elements in its formula: good prevailing over evil, emotional, catchy songs, cute sidekicks for comic relief, young romance, funny jokes) it also created a formulaic approach to how young girls set goals or standards (Chan 231). The plot usually containing a story of good prevailing over evil usually occurs with an older woman who is jealous of the young princess. All of the princess movies are also turned into musicals with the princess having a beautiful sing along voice and the cute sidekicks are always around to help save the day. The young romance helps fulfill the ideal of a “Happily Ever After” life that includes the princess and her prince, and the life that they are about to embark on together. Some good morals can come out of the stories, but it often leads young girls to believe that they should just wait for their prince and that is all there is to life. As the popular culture is evolving and women are beginning to be seen as stronger figures, Disney has decided to modernize the princesses as well. These movies mock the old values of the other princess movies by making them hard working and independent woman. Children, mostly girls, can begin to grow up with a better look on what will be important to them in the future as Disney continues to create more modern princesses that can relate to all children everywhere. Fairy Tales have been able to shape young girls’ lives. They begin to learn their morals through these enchanting stories. They should not leave all of their hope in the hands of some nonexistent prince, but should instead try to make the best of their own lives. The Princess and The Frog, is about a hardworking girl named Tiana. She wants to build her own restaurant and does whatever she can to become successful on her own. Brave is about a girl named Merida, who does not want to just



Cited: Works Brave. Disney, 2012. Film. Chan, Joseph. M, ―Disneyfying and Globalizing the Chinese Legend and Mulan: A Study of Transculturation‖. In Search of Boundaries: Communication,Nation- states, and Cultural Identities. Ed. Joseph M. Chan and Bryce T. McIntyre.Westport, CT: Ablex, 2002. 225- 248. Cheung, T. Y. (2005). Reading beyond ―happily ever after‖: refiguring the disney narrative of femininity. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Philosophy, Philosophy at, Hong Kong, Japan. Retrieved from http://repository.hku.hk/bitstream/10722/41373/1/FullText.pdf "FEMINIST IDENTITY OF MERIDA PORTRAYED IN BRAVE MOVIE | ARIYASNI | Jurnal Ilmiah Mahasiswa FIB." FEMINIST IDENTITY OF MERIDA PORTRAYED IN BRAVE MOVIE | ARIYASNI | Jurnal Ilmiah Mahasiswa FIB. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Aug. 2014. Frozen. Walt Disney, 2013. Film The Princess and the Frog. Walt Disney, 2009. Film.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Peggy Orenstein elaborates on how the classic fairytale of Cinderella does indeed have a negative effect on girls. Orenstein clearly states and debates throughout her article that the "princess craze" is a world-wide phenomenon and is damaging young girls. The damage Orenstein is referring to is depression caused by girls feeling that they must fulfill the princess image, and when they do not, it makes them feel as if they are not good enough the way they are. Orenstein also goes as far to say that women who are "perpetually nice" are more likely to be depressed and less likely to use contraception.…

    • 575 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “We don’t think of it as a traditional Princess Movie.”, from the producer of Frozen. In fact, Disney Animation Studio hasn’t produced traditional Princess Movie for a long time. After the rise of Pixar and DreamWorks, Disney is always finding its own differences from other animation studios, that what is its unique and simple. They understand more clear that they must “keep moving forward”, not only on the prince & princess story plot, but also on the development of the internal thesis. When politics talk about Disney Princess, they may concern a lot with the feminism, that women has taken half parts of the role on the Earth. Through reviewing different Princess Movies from different eras in the history, audience may notice the influence of…

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Disney Princess Role Model

    • 1285 Words
    • 6 Pages

    For the past seventy-eight years, Disney has been creating disney princess movies, a phenomenon that has swept the world, with worldwide gross of up to six hundred million dollars. Little girls from the age of two watch and enjoy these chauvinist movies, spending hundreds on outfits so that they can resemble their most idealized princess. The official disney princess line-up includes Snow White, Cinderella, Aurora, Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Pocahontas, Mulan, Tiana, Rapunzel, and Merida. While a single caucasian girl’s dream is blossoming, dreaming about the multiple princesses she could grow up to be, an african american girl’s is falling to pieces, with only a single idealized role model to chose from. While a child yearns for a prince to sweep…

    • 1285 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We all grew up hoping to be the princesses who met the dreamy prince and lived ‘happily ever after’ like in a fairy tale. People debate over whether or not Disney fairytales are beneficial for children. Like Arielle Schussler the author of the piece “A case against fairytales”,I am against fairy tales. In this essay I will argue on why kids should not be taught Disney or original fairy tales.…

    • 667 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This can be seen as a push for feminism in the movie because it doesn’t focus on her being because she’s a girl. Also it changes how things are normally executed in fairytales. Some examples include Tiana rescuing Naveen, the princess also being changed into an animal, Prince Naveen being a playboy and they changing into a hard worker, and Mama Odie who says to think about your wishes and if that’s really what you want. These are probably introduced into the movie because Disney is looking to find a prompt that will make people watch and buy the movie. Viewers want to have a role model that will be a good example for small children and make them change themselves for the…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lopreore finds that Disney seemed to have stuck with what they know best and since it sells, they never really veered from it. Moreover, Lopreore in an article, we learn that girls may follow in the footsteps of the gender roles that are exhibited from Disney Princesses. She states Disney princesses tend to “emphasize the importance of physical attractiveness and dutifulness in women, whereas the important qualities in the male characters included leadership and exploration” (11). This becomes problematic for both genders, because girls would begin to limit themselves in what they can do, like Collins stated, when they watch their favorite characters are only doing domestic work; furthermore, boys would grow up expecting women to do all the housework, and believe that they are far more superior than women are. Lopreore writes, “when such popular character such as the prince and princesses in Disney movies are portrayed in rigid, stereotypic roles, the children inspired by the characters are left with limited choices for the role - models” (11). These implications that are seen from the prince and princesses of Disney movies can greatly mold the child’s future and their perception of the opposite…

    • 606 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For young girls growing up watching Disney movies, there is usually a classic plot of the princess or young girl wanting more out of life and using marriage to a prince to achieve their goal. However some of the more recent Disney films strive to change this and make a difference in terms of empowering women. Some of these new films do a better job than others, while a few still fall back on the classic Disney fairytales where all the women can seem to do is wait around for their prince to save the day. Mulan, Enchanted, and The Princess and the Frog are all chances for Disney to showcase young women as powerful role models for all the young girls watching. These three films are some of the more modern Disney films, and they all make an attempt…

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Giroux, Henry A., and Grace Pollock. The Mouse That Roared: Disney and the End of Innocence. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2010. Print.…

    • 2528 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Snow White Gender Analysis

    • 1334 Words
    • 6 Pages

    For generations, Walt Disney films have been a “must watch” by parents, children and their families. However, these people may not see the hidden meanings behind Disney films. Currently, children are constantly exposed to media and opinions inherently presented within television, films, radio, books and more. Disney films are no exception. The films Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty all reinforce traditional gender roles, and the idea that lightness is supreme and will help when it comes to goodness conquering evil.…

    • 1334 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As Peggy Orenstein’s three year-old daughter entered the “princess phase,” Orenstein became increasingly frustrated. As a feminist, she worried about the negative effects the princess obsession would have on her daughter and other young girls in their futures. In “Cinderella and Princess Culture,” Orenstein sets out to discuss these effects. She discovers that although it seems as if this princess craze is creating negative gender stereotypes at an early age, maybe princess enthusiasts are really benefitting from their obsession.…

    • 665 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In fact, one of Walt Disney’s favourite tales was in fact Cinderella, with he can relate to the character with her hard-working nature in hopes that they are rewarded one day for it. Despite the criticism these characters may get, it is usually due to how they are in fact limited to roles that they are given during those times. Which means that as time moves on, the role of a Disney Princess has changed, along with the role of women in animated works in general with much more variety of roles given to them. The later Princesses are a lot more active and take much bigger chances than earlier Princesses, are actually go out and contribute a lot more to plot other than just being there to be rescued. For example, we gave Merida from Pixar’s Brave (2012). Her story is a focused a lot on her and the relationship she has with her mother, and we see how she grows as a character as well as watching her rebel against the typical treats of a Princess. She can be considered the new image of the Disney Princess, but she isn’t the only one or the first to do so. Ariel from The Little Mermaid (1990) is also a lot more curious about the world around her on land and she goes out and explores, and she even at one point makes effort to help and save the…

    • 2015 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Disney princesses seem to find love in the most magical ways, but that's not exactly how it is in the real world. They can find love by losing a shoe but if we lose a shoe, it gets stolen. This assumption makes children believe that love is easy to find and long-lasting. Everyone is bound to get a happily ever after even though in the real world it might not happen that way. Molly Driscoll is a writer for The Christian Science Monitor and she sees the love connection that happens in every Disney princess movie. She says, “Professor Thompson points particularly to "Frozen," which centers on sisters Elsa and Anna, as breaking the mold when it came to princesses. The movie includes poking fun at the idea of love at first sight ("You got engaged to someone you just met that day?" character Kristoff asks Princess Anna incredulously) and the climactic battle (spoilers ahead, but some young person in your life must have made you watch this movie by now) has the pivotal "act of true love" be one between two sisters, not a romantic couple.” It was so easy for Anna to fall in love and have a strong connection. It's not that easy in the real world sadly. Some people may get a happily ever after but it's not like that in all cases. In our world we have divorce, anger, and jealousy, which is something they lack in theirs. I have friends that even tell me that they wish true love like that really existed in the world because it's so uncommon. Disney shows children that true love exists and is easy to obtain, which affects children’s knowledge of life and…

    • 1191 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    As time passed and the world grew more progressive, the market seemed to request an independent princess. However, even when Disney succumbed to the objections of feminist, the films produced made a significantly less profit than those with more misogynistic foundations. Disney released The Princess and the Frog in 2009. This was a film with a strong female lead that personified traditional male and female characteristics. Unfortunately, The Princess and the Frog did not garner the profit of previous films. Per Whelan, “Much to Disney’s dismay, however, The Princess and the Frog did not do as well at the box office as they might have hoped—a dismal $104 million domestic gross. This had surprisingly dramatic consequences for Disney's next and perhaps last (so they claim) princess film: Tangled (2010)” (Whelan 31). Disney’s next release was a tragic regression back to previous states of misogyny. Tangled had the foundation to create a leading role that was independent. Regrettably, Rapunzel’s potential was trumped when she was given the plot of a girl constantly needing to be rescued by the deuteragonist, Flynn Rider. Opposing the girl like and naive Rapunzel were Flynn’s heroic and stubborn tendencies. This film all but completely reverted the princess narrative back to its original intent; telling the story that girls cannot achieve their goals without the help of a male counterpart. That underlying theme teaches young girls that they must be reliant on males and the desire to seek independence is…

    • 869 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The introduction of the book The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales by Bruno Bettelheim focused on the benefits of fairytales on child development. Bettelheim talks about how important developing the child's imagination is. Developing the imagination allows children to process what they see in the world and process what they hear in stories. This gives them a good grasp on their conscience (11-12). Fairy tales allows for children to learn about problems in the real world and ways to deal with them. Bettelheim says that there is a fine line between a story holding a child's attention and not; the story must be entertaining but by arousing their imagination…

    • 1154 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Fairy tales are then used as a technique of persuasion driving women to buy the products with the promise of being as beautiful and as desired as the princesses. Nevertheless, another aspect of this association is thought-provoking: the cultural adaptation of this literary genre. The feminine representation illustrated in the advertisements differs from the feminine ideal present in fairy tales. The princesses are adapted to our modern world and embody modernity. They embrace and illustrate such concepts as the independence of women and their seduction power. However, the most appealing aspect of this adaptation is the fact that it differs according to a given culture. In other words, the reinvention and adaptation of fairy tales, and by extension…

    • 206 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays