Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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What do Disney princesses and urban fantasy girls have in common?

I think everyone is familiar with the Disney princess by now: a collection of boiled sugar girls in sparkly dresses and high heels who happen to resemble the spirited, interesting heroines of the movies we love, all of them posed to perfection in big groups of rainbow loveliness. They stare soullessly from bookstore walls and supermarket shelves, hawking everything from dress-up shoes to fruit snacks. The stories they come from may be exciting, or interesting, or educational, but the Disney princess shows none of those traits when she's on-duty. She's there to be a display, and that's all she's going to be.

(As a total aside, if you want to see these girls when they're off-duty, and hence more fun, check out Amy Mebberson's Tumblr for her Pocket Princesses. They're awesome, and they have the spunk, spirit, and personality that the official Princesses sadly often lack.)

It wasn't until I read the book Cinderella Ate My Daughter that I noticed the creepiest thing about the Disney princesses: they never look at each other. Get six of them in a group, and they will all strike independent poses, they will all gaze at independent points off in the distance. They never make eye contact. They never acknowledge each other in any way. Why?

Because if you're going to be the fairest in the land, you can't ever admit that anyone of comparable fairness even exists. To be the prettiest princess, you must also be the only princess. So all you other princesses can just step off; this is my spotlight.

Creepy.

As most of you probably know, I read a lot of urban fantasy, geared both at adults and the YA market. I enjoy it. It makes me happy. It features, as a genre, a lot of strong female characters doing strong female things. Yes, it has its flaws, because all genres have flaws, but on the whole, it's probably my favorite genre right now.

Only. I noticed a thing. This is a thing that I am not immune to. Nor is it a universal thing (so making long lists of exceptions to this thing is not necessarily helpful, although discussion of specific examples is, as always, awesome). But it's a thing I think we should be thinking about, both as creators and consumers. And it's this:

Urban fantasy heroines have a lot in common with Disney princesses.

The standards for "fairest of them all" are different when your kingdom is a city and your ballgown is a pair of leather pants. You need to be the best ass-kicker, the best snarker, the best crime-solver or magic-user, or whatever. But they're still high standards to live up to, and it's easier to do when there's no one else in your sandbox. If no one else is kicking ass in leather pants, you don't have to try as hard to be the best. Consequentially, we keep seeing urban fantasy heroines with no peers. No other women who kick ass. They might have sidekicks, or even other strong female characters in supporting roles, but it feels like a lot of them...well. Like a lot of them just don't have any friends.

In my daily life, I have a lot of friends who are, well, fairer than me in some ways. Vixy is an amazing lead vocalist. Pretty sure if we were auditioning against each other, she'd get the part. Also, cartoon birdies braid her hair. Cat and Bear and I write very different books, but we're all award-winners and best-sellers and Cat raises chickens and Bear climbs mountains, neither of which I do. Kate is witty and snarky and often faster on her feet than I am, as well as being a thousand times more organized. Meg is a natural redhead who makes her own clothes and bounces back after flying over the handlebars of her bike...and these are only a few of the amazing, incredible, bad-ass women who share my life.

It can be easy, as an author, to smooth and sand the story until all the unnecessary characters are gone, and I can see where that might mean you have to lose a few of the members of the Breakfast Club. At the same time, if that process leaves six male characters and one female, and only one of those male characters is Prince Charming, why are the other five all dudes? Can't we balance things a little? For me, female characters are more believable when they have friends. When there are other women around to talk to, trade tips on wearing leather pants without chafing with, and generally enjoy.

And if someone says that a story containing more than three characters "only needed" one woman, I sort of have issues with that. (In my perfect world, no one would say that about two or three character stories, either. But I'm willing to grant that some stories need two males and one female, if you'll grant that the opposite is also true.) Even Magic Mike, a movie about male strippers, managed to have two female characters with distinct and interesting, if brief, speaking roles.

I don't like that the Disney princesses have been frozen in place, never making eye contact with the only people who could really be their peers and understand the trials of the tiara. I'd hate it for that to happen to our urban fantasy girls, too.
Tags: contemplation, reading things, writing
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  • 169 comments
*L*

I'm laughing because I'm writing a story that centers around one person, but she's hardly the uber-awesomest of her little group, and as the series goes on (at least as I plan it), she loves other people playing in her sandbox. What can I say, the girl is personable and since she's far from the most powerful, she has to depend on other people.

It does make managing the cast effing difficult, but my protag is far more sociable than I am, so it's actually kind of fun to balance her little group.

For the princesses, I think part of it is that they're all from different stories and different times, so maybe they really don't see each other, because then we'd have a dimensional paradox and chaos would ensue. :)

But hard to say the same for the urban fantasy heroes and heroines, and maybe Avengers addressed that in its own way: Bringing a bunch of Type As into one group is damn hard, and that's why none of them are looking at each other in the poster.
Except that the Princesses do appear in media and stories together, usually under the veil of "Disney Princess Storytime," and in those instances, they supposedly interact, sort of in a Disneyland-esque "outside of time" setting. And even there, they never look at each other. I think that's a good guideline/justification, but it doesn't change the imagery we present, and hence the message it conveys.

I don't want equality, or even necessarily friends. Just multiple girls. Much as I loved The Avengers, their omission of any female heroes beyond Black Widow was where that movie let me down.
I know they call them princesses, and that's the baseline story, but really? all that jewelry, all that makeup, all that decolletage? the swooning at feet of men? I can't help thinking: Disney prostitutes-in-training.
This was also a problem of mine with avengers. They had Maria and Natasha who I ADORE BOTH GREATLY, but was surprised they didn't interact at least once. And yet another problem why I don't like the line up of guardians of the galaxy/Ant-man when they could introduce Wasp, Valkryie (I'm hoping they add her in Thor 2 but it looks doubtful) along with Ms.Marvel and other female heroes of the marvel universe. This is why I took it upon myself (for nanowrimo) to write an all female ensemble of superheroes with strong friendships outside of it and I just really want some ladies on the screen that kick ass and have great friendships.
The ongoing lack of Janet Van Dyne makes me stabby.
SERIOUSLY. YOU HAVE ALL THIS GREAT MATERIAL AND YOU GO WITH ANT-MAN WHEN REALLY, I'VE STOPPED CARING ABOUT SOME OF THE DUDES (heh sorry hulk, I haven't seen the movie in forever).

#WaspMovieorBust ---- that should totally trend just saying....