ABSTRACT

A presence for decades in individuals’ everyday life practices and identity formation, the Walt Disney Company has more recently also become an influential element within the "big" curriculum of public and private spaces outside of yet in proximity to formal educational institutions. Disney, Culture, and Curriculum explores the myriad ways that Disney’s curricula and pedagogies manifest in public consciousness, cultural discourses, and the education system. Examining Disney’s historical development and contemporary manifestations, this book critiques and deconstructs its products and perspectives while providing insight into Disney’s operations within popular culture and everyday life in the United States and beyond.

The contributors engage with Disney’s curricula and pedagogies in a variety of ways, through critical analysis of Disney films, theme parks, and planned communities, how Disney has been taught and resisted both in and beyond schools, ways in which fans and consumers develop and negotiate their identities with their engagement with Disney, and how race, class, gender, sexuality, and consumerism are constructed through Disney content. Incisive, comprehensive, and highly interdisciplinary, Disney, Culture, and Curriculum extends the discussion of popular culture as curriculum and pedagogy into new avenues by focusing on the affective and ontological aspects of identity development as well as the commodification of social and cultural identities, experiences, and subjectivities.

chapter 1|28 pages

Introduction

Feeling Disney, Buying Disney, Being Disney

part 1|74 pages

Feeling Disney

chapter 2|16 pages

Waltdisneyconfessions@tumblr

Narrative, Subjectivity, and Reading Online Spaces of Confession

chapter 3|12 pages

Practical Pigs and Other Instrumental Animals

Public Pedagogies of Laborious Pleasure in Disney Productions

chapter 4|14 pages

“This Is No Ordinary Apple!”

Learning to Fail Spectacularly from the Queer Pedagogies of Disney's Diva Villains

chapter 5|14 pages

The Postfeminist Princess

Public Discourse and Disney's Curricular Guide to Feminism

chapter 6|16 pages

“The Illusion of Life”

Nature in the Animated Disney Curriculum

part 2|74 pages

Buying Disney

chapter 7|15 pages

I Dream of a Disney World

Exploring Language, Curriculum, and Public Pedagogy in Brazil's Middle-Class Playground

chapter 8|16 pages

If It Quacks Like a Duck …

The Classist Curriculum of Disney's Reality Television Shows

chapter 9|12 pages

Deliriumland

Disney and the Simulation of Utopia

chapter 10|13 pages

Camp Disney

Consuming Queer Subjectivities, Commodifying the Normative

part 3|74 pages

Being Disney

chapter 12|14 pages

On the Count of Three

Magic, New Knowledge, and Learning at Walt Disney World

chapter 14|12 pages

The Corseted Curriculum

Four Feminist Readings of a Strong Disney Princess

chapter 15|13 pages

A New Dimension of Disney Magic

MyMagic+ and Controlled Leisure

chapter 16|18 pages

Consuming Innocence

Disney's Corporate Stranglehold on Youth in the Digital Age