google.com, pub-8136553845885747, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Dear Future Historians,: The creation of female archetypes in the classic Disney Princess films, with the emphases of villains Vs heroes.

7/12/2026

The creation of female archetypes in the classic Disney Princess films, with the emphases of villains Vs heroes.

 


This paper examines the creation of female archetypes in the classic Disney Princess films, with the emphases of villains Vs heroes. It concludes that Disney’s female body on screen has been in support of patriarchal stereotypes over a long period, up until the films Brave and Frozen. Their innovative characters broke such stereotypes and introduced a new female hero narrative; one that is more ‘female friendly’. The Literature review is integrated throughout this paper.

Within the Disney animated films, the design of the on-screen female body and face of the villain female characters uses strategies that are consistently different from the design of the heroines (i.e. the princess figures).

The villainous characters in particular use specific design features to directly link their characters evil nature to their physical appearance. There is an implication that their 'otherness' is marked by their ‘failure’ to correspond to specific ideas of what a 'good' female body should be.

This paper examines the classic female Disney Princess and villain archetypes in Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Little Mermaid and Tangled (Golden, et al., 2018), and establishes Disney’s two ‘objective lists’ of the female body on screen; one for how a good female body should be, and another one for how a villain female body should be.

Those two lists are in antithesis and mirroring each other, as they both objectify women reducing them to an object, and thus static level of existence. This perspective rips the dynamic potential and individuality out of what it means to be human.

‘Objectification theory posits that girls and women are typically acculturated to internalize an observer’s perspective as a primary view of their physical selves... Bodies exist within social and cultural contexts and hence are also constructed through sociocultural practices and discourses’ (Fredrickson and Roberts, 2006).

The controversial term ‘objective list’ is a term borrowed from philosophy. The supporters of the ‘objective list’ go back to Plato’s Theory of Ideas. It is the belief that there is an objective list of what is good and what is evil or bad for us, despite our time, place, or preferences, and any deviation from that objective list has consequences. An objective list claims to be universal in all places and all historical times (Michalopoulou, 2025).

Preferentism is a school of thought in philosophy that questions the objectivity of any ‘objective’ list of values. A Preferentist’s objection is that this list is always changing according to time and place, and even to one’s preferences, thus it cannot be objective. To convince a Preferentist about the objectivity of a list, the supporters of such a list would first need to agree on what that list is. This has not happened.

Additionally, ‘objective lists’ pose the obvious ‘danger of some group forcing as “final values” upon others their own interest, in a paternalistic way’ (Barber, 2014, p. 46, cited in Michalopoulou, 2025). This paper concludes that this danger has been fulfilled in the Disney Princess franchise.

Within the classic Disney Princess films, the female protagonist is confined into passivity, ephemeral youth and pastel colours, and the villain is a peri-menopausal woman that looks more like a drag queen, questioning her ‘right’ to represent femininity. These archetypes have elements of both sexism and queerphobia.

Marcia R. Lieberman (1972) points out that the stories by Disney claim to be inspired by ancient fairy tales yet are carefully selected to ‘reflect the taste of the refined literary men who edited the first popular collections of fairy tales for children during the Victorian era’, chosen ‘partly for their moral lesson’.

Scholars use the term Disneyfication of stories, to describe Disney’s effect on our perception of ancient fairy tales. ‘Disneyfication refers to the transformation of children’s books into a journey to a magic kingdom; the term also reveals negative aspects due to its tendency to consumption, homogenization and merchandising.’ (Bălinişteanu, 2014).

However, we see that even though the bodily requirements to be a ‘good female’ stay almost the same throughout the decades (young, pale colours, small/fragile, etc), as we move forward in time the ‘good’ females are taking a more active role, rather than the initial passivity requirement.

A classic Disney Princess must either be passive, or unsuccessful in her attempts, to justify the prince’s necessity. In Tangled (2010), Rapunzel fails to save Flynn and is being saved by him instead, by cutting her hair that represent her magical, untamed side.

This pattern changes with Brave (2012) and Frozen (2013), as Disney’s ‘objective’ list of values adjusts with the modern times. Because Brave and Frozen have no female villains and they represent a new ‘list of values Disney era’, those films are mentioned in this paper only where it is necessary for context regarding the Classic Princess films with a female villain story.

The princess is worthy to be saved because of her beauty, if she succumbs to her given role; passivity. One cannot help but ask: ‘what if Snow White were not beautiful enough? Would she have beam buried alive and no one would have desired to rescue her’? (Nada, 2015).

In the Disney Princess franchise, the female villain is peri-menopausal or older and is obsessed with staying young. She ought to be ambitious, she is taller than the princess (an attribute usually related with masculinity), she wears heavy make-up and dark clothes, moves in a weird way, makes ugly facial expressions, and transforms into a scary old witch, or a dragon, or she can be an overweight octopus.

Mainly, the villain needs to be old and uncanny. This Disney approach of representation of the antagonist female body on screen establishes ‘the link between old age and villainy’ (Nada, 2015). ‘The representation of the human body and the uncanny have a particular historical importance’ (Kamm, 2015), and real consequences.

Scholars claim a connection between the negative aging stereotypes in Disney films and the findings that children having negative feelings towards older people (Robinson, et al., 2007). ‘The term “agism” was first coined in the late 60s in the United States by Robers Butler to name widespread discrimination against elderly solely based on their being “old” (Nada, 2015).

Elements of ethnic diversity might also be present in the villain characters, to highlight their otherness to Disney’s assumed white audience, despite Disney films having global success. Vanessa Martyas (2010) writes that ‘Clearly, Disney has created a division in its presentation of white women versus women of colour.’

Snow White is the first one of those films, made in 1937. Snow White looks like a 16-year-old girl, a pattern that continues in all Disney Princess films. A 16-year-old is too young for a love story with an adult for today’s standards. However, at the time those films were made, 16 was a ‘proper’ age for marriage; usually with an older man. Thus, this paper will ignore the age difference of the princesses and the princes.

In Snow White the villain is never named. Nada Elnahla (2015) sees the technique of not providing a specific name to the queen’s character as ‘dehumanizing’. The queen is additionally ‘othered’ by her dark clothes and scary facial expressions. However, her facial features are not very unlike Snow White’s and they are wearing the same lipstick; with the main difference being the age and their fashion choices; except the lipstick. Snow White establishes the Disney Female Princess and Villain Objective Lists that exists in all later films of the Disney Princess movies, up until Brave and Frozen.

The Princess ought to be young, small, with pastel colours, submissive and follow the rules or face consequences. Snow White opened the Dwarfs door when she shouldn’t have and she got poisoned. Ariel lost her voice making a deal with evil Ursula. The underlying message here is that a female needs to surrender to the expected role of passivity or face death.

Sid Connor (2026) has observed a connection with women’s biopic and ‘the cultural logic of euthanasia’, the ‘explicit assumption that’ sometimes for some people life is ‘no longer worth living’ (Garland-Thomson, 2004). This paper argues that Disney films make the same connection in their Princesses stories regarding the villains’ life, while it warns the princesses that their only hope to be saved is by a prince, as Jesus saved church from damnation (John 3:16).

The ‘Cinderella Complex’ is a term by Colette Dowling (1981) that describes ‘the female fear of success and her incapability to change her situation without help by an outside force, usually male – represented by the prince in the fairy tale’ (in Nada, 2015).

Cinderella – 1950 – continues the glorification of beauty. Yet, rather than making a straight connection with youth, Cinderella story tells us that youth does not necessarily presupposes beauty, and old age is not inherently evil. Cinderella’s stepsisters are young but not beautiful. Cinderella’s Godmother is old but not evil. Cinderella at the end dares to ask to try the glass slipper, despite her stepmother’s attempts to stop her.

‘Based on the Cinderella tale, women have three choices: First, to become ruthlessly competitive and pettily cruel; secondly, to be swallowed by a patriarchal world that does not value them; thirdly, to believe that loving service brings joy and to wait for divine help’ (Clarke, 2000, pp 698-707, cited in Nada, 2015).

In Sleeping Beauty – 1959 – we see the second sign of female action that is not punished. The three good fairies free the prince when he is captured, implying that females are not helpless or evil. This ‘created’ the need to exaggerate the female villain’s ‘otherness’, her difference with the old good fairies. Thus, we see Maleficent at the end being transformed into a dragon, before she is slayed by the prince, with the help of the good fairies.

The Little Mermaid – 1989 – continues the same patterns; Ariel loses her voice and needs to be rescued. However, Ariel does succeed saving Eric from a shipwreck, and Sebastian would confirm Ariel is not at all passive and without ambition (to meet the humans and walk on forbidden land).

Tangled is the most recent of those films – 2010 – yet we see a backlash into the villain being driven by her inability to accept old age and at the end we see Rapunzel’s inability to save the male protagonist. Instead, he is the one that saves her, by cutting her hair, and Mother Gothel falls off the tower, as her life depended on Rapunzel’s magical hair.

Additionally, we see hints of racial negative stereotypes here, with the difference of the blond hair of Rapunzel when it is magical, and the dark hair of Gothel’s and even Rapunzel’s after being cut and losing their magic. For all these reasons this paper does not see a tangible improvement in the Disney negative female stereotypes before Brave (2012) and Frozen (2013).

Frozen is breaking the negative stereotypes that Jordan Peterson calls ‘archetypical dynamics’. Peterson, a psychologist known for his conservative views on gender described Frozen as ‘deeply propagandistic’. In his own words: ‘It attempted to write a modern fable that was a counter-narrative to a classic story like, let’s say, Sleeping Beauty – but with no understanding whatsoever of the underlying archetypal dynamics.’

Peterson’s negative reaction to Frozen, after he has described in his lectures as masterpieces older Disney films such as Pinocchio and Lion King to justify his right wing political views regarding the necessity of the patriarchy, show the obvious difference in the ‘objective’ list of values in the new films in comparison with the classic era of Disney films that this paper is examining.

‘The Walt Disney Company simplified the representations of gender in its films to make them more accessible and clear for young children to attain the “appropriate message”’ (O’Brien 161 in Martyas, 2010). Martyas continues: ‘Disney uses the dichotomy to highlight the qualities “a woman needs if she wants to get married and therefore be happy and fulfilled” and gives no warning to girls about the fact that they too will become older.

In most Disney Princess films ‘an aging female character exhibits stereotypical behaviours traditionally associated with aging. ‘According to Perry (1999, p. 209), “By continually depicting aging as negative, the media creates a society that denies and mistrust all persons who are past their youth”.

Such depiction shows how society values youthful beauty in women, consequently, when such beauty is lost and those women try to compensate it with power, villainesses are born (Nada, 2015). In the context of Disney movies, the word “woman” has become synonymous with “victim” in a patriarchal society,' (Nandini Maity, 2014).

Dawn Elizabeth England (et al., 2011) used content coding analyses on the Disney Princess films to ‘demonstrate that all the movies portray some stereotypical representations of gender’, and they have created a Disney Princess Characteristics list. This list is what this paper describes as Disney Female Objective list of values.

 

Female Princess (Wellman, 2020) Disney Characteristics List:

 

           Physically weak, Asks for or accepts advice or help

           Shows emotion, Sensitive, Collapses crying, Ashamed

           Affectionate, Nurturing

           Tentative, Fearful, Submissive

           Tents to physical appearance, Described as physically attractive as a definition of femininity

           Victim and Troublesome

           European beauty standards (seven out of eight)

           Wearing lighter colours

           Don’t get much screen time in their own films, and/or Don’t get many lines (ex. Ariel losing her voice)

           ‘Not given clear reasons for doing things. (they are) shown as Two-dimensional characters.’

 

Female Villain (Wellman, 2020) Disney Characteristics List:

 

·        Old

·        Wearing heavy, dark makeup, like bright red lipstick with heavy eyeshadow

·        Dressed in power colours – black, blue, green, brown – (Knapp, et al., in Wellman, 2020), purple, and red.  Black and purple have been ‘linked to mourning’, which connects with the idea of euthanasia (Connor, 2026) mentioned previously. Red is often seen negatively and is ‘related to aggression, defiance, and strain (Grzybowski & Kupidura-Majewski, 2019)

·        ‘Villains utilize space and gestures in order to express their power over others... they walk slower... are also more purposeful when they move... carry themselves with a straight back and solemn face... (and make) gestures and over the top movements to enhance their presence... they are also... extremely expressive and loud’

·        Nontraditional beauty standards, or ugly

·        Bigger than the princesses. Could also be overweight or nonsymmetrical

·        Deeper or harsher voices than the princesses (related with masculinity)

·        Nonverbal power

 

Germaine Greer (2020, p, 34) in The Female Eunuch, shares the discouragement she got from her mother as a child to exercise, so her muscles won’t grow to look masculine. Simone de Beauvoir (2009, p. 163) wrote that: History has shown that men have always held all concrete powers. We can see the antithesis of the princess’s ‘unclear reasons in her actions and the villains’ posture that ‘communicates they are moving to a specific place of importance’ (Wellman, 2020).

Wellman recognises that the newer Disney movies (Tangled, Cinderella, Maleficent, and Moana) ‘show more developed characters for longer periods of time (2020). Despite this progress, the introduction of Disney+ has the potential to reintroduce and reinforce old stereotypes with a sense of nostalgia for something the new generations might idolise, without the understanding of the female oppression that those stereotypes usually come with.

‘The social importance of the feminine beauty ideal lies in its ability to reproduce gender inequality (Bartky 1990; Currie 1997; Free Wolf 1991; in Baker-Sperry, & Grauerholz, 2003), Disney princess films ‘have come to represent more than just animated film characters... they provide girls with a strictly one-dimensional vision of femininity and a rigidly defined set of gendered roles (pollen, 2011, in Golden, Jacoby, 2018).

Disney films are so popular that they cannot deny having influence into worldwide audience, creating stereotypes and ideas of gender. Their ‘advertising campaign aims to attract a wide audience of girls with the ultimate goal of encouraging children to personally identify with characters so they will purchase the associated products (Do Rozario, 2004, cited in England, et all., 2011).

‘The Walt Disney company has the opportunity to contribute to the gender empowerment of children worldwide’ (Hine, et al., 2018) Thus, there is a need for further research on the topic of negative Disney female stereotypes and their effect on the self-image of girls and women.

Further research can investigate the connection of the changes in the Disney stereotypes that we see in Brave and Frozen, and any contemporary sociopolitical events regarding female rights and feminism, and those stereotypes in other film genres such as horror and female Gothic.

Moreover, there can be collaborative research between universities globally, to investigate the effects of the Disney films in children around the Globe, from different ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds.

 

Word count: 2753

 

Reflection of my creative process

This research has revealed to me regarding my own writing process that I am a combination of order and chaos. I started this research from a documentary I randomly saw on the television with Miriam Margolyes (Miriam Margolyes Made Me Me, 2026) and a podcast I heard on the go the next day (Philosophy Podcast: Overthink – Evil). The documentary with Miriam was very brave showing Miriam’s aged body on screen in some very intimate moments. I found it very beautiful.

The podcast the next day was talking about the difference of Evil characters in Disney Vs Studio Ghibli films. The presenters explained that in Disney there is a ‘black and white’ mindset when it comes to ‘good and evil’. Someone is evil, and they need to be exterminated; in self-defence of the ‘good’. In Studio Ghibli on the other hand, we find characters that start evil and then it turns out they are not that bad, like Lady Eboshi from Princess Mononoke.

The podcast then focused on the Disney female Villain, and how her aged and uncanny body on screen is implicitly connected with her evilness. The difference between the sweet documentary with old Miriam and the Disney negative stereotypes was occupying my mind for days and I could not think of a different topic to research.

My initial research question was:

How does the audience and the critics react to the aged body of women on screen in different genres? - in Comedy / Horror / Romance?

Or:

The ‘male gaze’ and the Disney stereotypes - Miriam's documentary is challenging those stereotypes. What techniques is it using?

Then I got into my ‘order phase’. I started my research collecting papers about Disney female negative stereotypes.

When I made my final essay plan, I already had abandoned the idea of combining Miriam Margolyes, Disney, and Studio Ghibli in a 3000 words paper. I decided to focus on Disney, as I had found much more essays on that topic that I could reference in my own paper. At this point I thought I would focus more on the Little Mermaid, as Ursula reminded me more of Miriam Margolyes, and I always loved Ursula.

Then I started reading the papers and underlining the parts that were relevant to the Disney female negative stereotypes. That is when I realised that focusing on Ariel and Ursula, or any other film, would miss the point of how those stereotypes are repeated, with some variations, up until the films Brave and Frozen.

Thus, I changed my plan again, and I tried to show that Disney chose those stereotypes consciously, knowing that they shape the values of the next generations, and the effect visual messages have on screen, especially in young children.

Yet, at the end I realised the power the audience has, to shape the ‘new narratives’, despite the resistance of people like Jordan Peterson.

Due to health and family issues, I could not enjoy this research and go even deeper into my ‘research rabbit hall’, as much as I would like to. Still, it has been inspiring and a good practice for me, before I start my PhD research next academic year.

 

Word count: 532

 


 

My Disney’s Princess ‘Objective List’

 

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