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Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches From The Frontlines Of The New Girlie-Girl Culture (2011)

Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Frontlines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture (2011)

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Rating
3.64 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0061711527 (ISBN13: 9780061711527)
Language
English
Publisher
Harper

About book Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches From The Frontlines Of The New Girlie-Girl Culture (2011)

There were a couple points where I felt that Orenstein slips into supporting the virgin/whore dichotomy that she spends the rest of the book railing against, but pretty good overall. I did appreciate her upfront-ness about femininity being a tricky knot to untangle and that she doesn't have all the answers (and that the answers she does dispense don't always work or apply to everybody). Also, I was pretty excited when in chapter 4 she visited the preschool that I attended as a kiddo to talk with gender development researchers :) I was a little nervous reading this book. I am a feminist but I think that all of the Disney princesses from Snow White to Tiana (and all the in-between characters the company doesn't recognize) are great feminist role models. I recognize the problematic elements in the films but I so hate when people start griping about Ariel 'changing herself for a man'. (She was unhappy in her home and I would consider her father abusive for what he did to her grotto.) That being said, it wasn't necessarily a Disney-hate-fest and was quite informative about the business and marketing aspects behind the awful merchandising. I do wish it had talked a little bit more about the 8+ white princesses versus the 'one and done' pattern for the others. I was especially disappointed that she had very little to say on the importance of Tiana and how different she was from the earlier princesses the author tended to take issue with.Overall, would recommend to feminists and Disney feminists alike.

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Throughout this entire book, I just had an overwhelming urge to scream "get a f**king life!!!"... She is the extreme of a completely unnecessary method of denying her child standard luxuries in life. Too much, just much too much. How dare she take that choice away from her daughter?! Guiding your child and helping them make the right decisions is one thing but this woman? Jeez, I'm just glad she's not my Mum, put it that way. And yet, like watching a car crash unfold before you, as horrid as it is, you can't help but stand agape and continue to stare at the monstrosity before you... A macabre curiosity on my part perhaps. She made a couple of valid points and did make me think about things in a different perspective, so not all was lost. But I really think she was a tad too harsh on her girl. Interesting and potentially (for the right reader), enlightening. For me, a thought provoking window into the mind of a madwoman. There is nothing more I can say for this book.
—Faisal

This was a hard/great book to read over Christmas, the mega-marketing time of year. I admit that I started this book of essays thinking, "my daughter isn't really into princesses, so we have escaped all this mess..." No, we have not! Orenstein presents excellent questions about the role of media in shaping girls' identities. She looks at everything from Barbie to Disney to social media to beauty pageants...in the end, I feel disgusted by this world we live in and full of despair in how to empower and protect my own daughter as she navigates though it. But I also feel confident that going forward eyes wide open, with more agency (and less helplessness) will make the road a bit easier.
—ironweasel

Actual Rating: 3.5 Stars
—jaya

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