Lexington Books
Pages: 364
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-7936-0401-9 • Hardback • March 2020 • $140.00 • (£108.00)
978-1-7936-0403-3 • Paperback • March 2022 • $45.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-7936-0402-6 • eBook • March 2020 • $43.50 • (£35.00)
Shearon Roberts is assistant professor of mass communication and a faculty member in African American and diaspora studies at Xavier University of Louisiana.
Part I: Rebranding the Disney Princess
Chapter One: Recasting the Disney Princess in an Era of New Media and Social Movements
Shearon Roberts
Chapter Two: Diversity Sells: The Dollars and Cents of Woke Rebranding
Shaniece B. Bickham and Shearon Roberts
Chapter Three: Sofia the First: A Princess Life Fit for a Preschool Audience
Sarah Maben
Chapter Four: From Princess to Heroine: Expanding Representations of Girls and Women
Jana Thomas and Holly Speck
Chapter Five: Pop, Hip-Hop, and the Hamiltonization of the Disney Soundtrack
Daron Roberts and Turon Nicholas
Part II: Diversifying the Disney Princess
Chapter Six: Elena of Avalor and Mama Coco: Latina Sheroes and Knowledge Keepers
Alberto Rodriguez and Veronica N. Durant
Chapter Seven: #NolaBorn: Tiana and the Road Home for New Orleans Residents
Sheryl Kennedy Haydel
Chapter Eight: Moana: The Daughter of the Chief and Polynesian (in)Visibility
Jenny Banh
Chapter Nine: #MakeMulanRight: Retracing the Genealogy of Mulan from Ancient Chinese Tale to Disney Classic.
Jenny Banh
Chapter Ten: Pocahontas: Digital Coloniality, Coercive Fiction, and “Renewing” Western Hegemonic Power.
Leece Lee-Oliver
Chapter Eleven: A Whole New World: Gender Norms, Islamophobia and Orientalism
Krystal Ghisyawan
Part III: Deconstructing Princess Narratives
Chapter Twelve: Belle: Beyond the Classic Story for the Modern Audience
Rebecca Weidman-Winter
Chapter Thirteen: “Let it Go” as Radical Mantra: Subverting the Princess Narrative in Frozen
Susanne R. Hackett
Chapter Fourteen: Shuri of Wakanda, The People’s Princess
Charity Clay
Chapter Fifteen: Maleficent: Rape, Wrath, and the Feminine Divine
Sarah A. Clunis
Part IV: Embedding Social Discourse around the Disney Heroine
Chapter Sixteen: Disney’s Social Consciousness: Explaining #BlackLivesMatter through Zootopia
Ahli Chatters and Shearon Roberts
Chapter Seventeen: “It’s Good to Be Bad”: Marginalization and Othering in the Descendants Films
Shearon Roberts
Chapter Eighteen: No Capes Needed: The Plight of Super Moms
Alexis Woods Barr
Chapter Nineteen: The Women of Wakanda: Black Beauty and Casting
Abeo Jackson
Chapter Twenty: Culture Wars and the Politics of Finding Dory
Prairie Parnell
Epilogue: Notes from Behind the Camera from a Father of Two Daughters
Varion Laurent
Recasting the Disney Princess in an Era of New Media and Social Movements brings together a wide range of scholars to provide up to date analyses on the many faces of contemporary Disney productions. Written in a highly accessible style and taking up central issues of gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, generation, and nation, the chapters in this book explore most of the recent Disney hits in relation to issues of difference and diversity. As such this book makes an excellent addition to the growing field of Disney studies.
— Angharad N. Valdivia, University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign
Shearon Roberts brings together a range of critical contributions to scholarly discussions about the contemporary Disney princess brand and connected consumer culture. This book offers incisive analyses of Disney’s changing media landscape and related issues concerning race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, coloniality, structural inequalities, and the marketing of "difference." It explores socio-political dimensions of Disney pop-culture and offers readers the chance to learn about the evolving image of the Disney princess.
— Francesca Sobande, Cardiff University
Recasting the Disney Princess in an Era of New Media and Social Movements offers an insightful and unique analysis of the Disney princess as a pop culture phenomenon. This volume interrogates the values that drive Disney movie narratives, scripts, and assumptions. Each contribution gives the reader a new perspective, forcing one to reflect on the role and influence of entertainment in shaping social norms. This book opens new vistas to our theoretical, philosophical, and practical understanding of entertainment culture. It is a timely and critical resource for the pop culture industry, scholars, professionals, and consumers.
— Bala A. Musa, Azusa Pacific University
Media entertainment reflects the culture of its time. In this volume, Roberts introduces readers to "Disney 4.0"—a brand of Disney in which protagonists are as diverse as the children and adults who watch these stories. From the author's own recollections of her daughter's desire to be the next Vanellope Von Schweetz (the daredevil racer and one of the heroes of the Wreck it Ralph films) to a collection of essays from children recounting their excitement with seeing princesses on-screen that looked "just like me," Roberts and her contributors make a compelling argument for why diversity matters for Disney and for us all. Through a mix of anecdote and theory, this volume assembles a diverse set of voices who individually and jointly make a strong case for why we should critically consume the heroes of our generation and past generations. The book is easily accessible and should inspire us to revisit our familiar Disney properties with a fresh perspective.
— Nicholas Bowman, Texas Tech University