These women did a body-positive Disney Princess photo shoot, because some heroes wear gowns

These women did a body-positive Disney Princess photo shoot, because some heroes wear gowns
These women did a body-positive Disney Princess photo shoot, because some heroes wear gowns

We love the Disney Princesses, and we love that Disney attempts to make its heroines as racially inclusive as possible. However, Disney Princesses are perhaps the least body positive group of animated characters ever. Disney Princesses are size zero, tall, and lithe and yet somehow also have hourglass proportions. Yes, they are cartoons, but it’s baffling that they couldn’t draw their heroes with more realistic body types. This is why we are celebrating these two women who did a body-positive Disney Princess photo shoot.

Two body positive bloggers, Michelle Elman and Amy Wooldridge, came up with the idea for the photo shoot after spending their lives feeling less-than in the shadow of Disney Princesses’ perfect bodies.

“WE NEED A FAT PRINCESS. Growing up with Disney, my heart hurt a little,” Elman wrote on Instagram. “Disney princesses are seen as the epitome of beauty and even as a young girl, I quickly learnt that meant I wasn’t beautiful. This was emphasised even more when we shopped for princess birthday parties. There were never any in my size. Things haven’t really changed. It was sooo hard for @amyeloisew and I to find these in our sizes. I actually wanted to be jasmine so I could be a Scarred princess but no surprises that people still continue to assume fat women don’t wear crop tops. How incredible would it be for little kids to grow up and instead of saying ‘I want to look like her!’ they could say ‘wow she looks like me!’ How incredible would it be if the epitome of beauty and the envy of many little girls wasn’t so equated to thinness?”

So there was an article written about us being fat (and a Scarred) Disney princesses on a health website, posing it as a question up for debate. It makes me think why every other article written about me has been written as a statement but this was a question. But there was something else that got my attention, throughout the article, they called us “fat” even in the title, they called us “fat” princesses. Amy @amyeloisew and I are not “fat”. We are fat. Fat is not a dirty word. I want to address the fact that people will assume a fat princess will promote obesity? It’s going to come since people also think fat people existing promotes obesity. A BIG FAT NO. Representing bodies is simply that, representation. Fat people deserve representation because fat people exist and pretending in your cartoons and tv shows that we don’t exist has never helped anyone. We don’t need more shame and silence around fatness, we need to be seen, heard, represented and destigmatised. I also believe everyone deserves to feel beautiful. Yes, beauty should not matter but in our world it does and I personally believe people stop caring whether they are beautiful, when they feel beautiful so I want to make it a priority that everyone FEELS beautiful. Yes, even fat people. Yes, even unhealthy people. And no, those two are not equivalent. It’s this whole health debate right? First of all, let’s stop with this thin = healthy. Second of all, would it be so bad to have an unhealthy princess? I wish I felt beautiful lying in a hospital bed. It’s not glamorising illness. Instead, it’s telling young kids everywhere that their worth and beauty is defined so much more than simply their health. I think that would make a remarkable Disney movie. Health is not a choice remember, it’s a privilege. And it’s frankly a toss of the coin that I ended up with 15 surgeries before the age of 19, and you didn’t. All surgeries were not weight related and all surgeries caused weight gain. So put that in your pipe and smoke it. Life saving surgeries that made me live longer, also made me fatter. #ScarredNotScared • : @the_feeding_of_the_fox

A post shared by Michelle Elman (@scarrednotscared) on Dec 14, 2017 at 10:05am PST

Elma has surgical scars on her body and feels like body positivity should go beyond size. All we see are Disney Princesses with beautiful unblemished skin, making young girls with scars, acne, or freckles feel as if their unique bodies aren’t beautiful.

Wooldridge summed it up as such:

“How amazing would it be if there was more representation in media? If children were able to watch cartoons with diversity in? How much more would we achieve if we didn’t spend so much time hating our bodies?”

Damn right!