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Eating Disorders In The Little Mermaid

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Increasingly more girls recently have begun to take up eating disorders at younger and younger ages in attempt to keep up with present day trends. Girls as young as five years old have been found to possess these eating disorders. As Dr. Ira Sacker has explained to ABC News, his patient, Justine Gallagher, began at the age of five when she started to eat paper and avoid meals in an attempt to lose weight. As Justine stated, “I thought if I ate my regular meals that I would get heavy and people would make fun of me.” This type of behavior surrounds us in our everyday lives yet we continue to turn a blind eye. It is vital that we identify the causes of these eating disorders, in an attempt to prevent them in the future, for no girl at …show more content…

In her evaluation, she analyzes how the princess characters sexualization may have an effect on the way that adolescent girls act. For example, she notes that Ariel, the Disney princess from the movie, “The Little Mermaid” moves and acts extremely sexualized as she only wear a seashell bra for clothing. In the plot of the movie, Ariel’s voice is taken a way in exchange for the ability to walk on land as a human, so that she may woo the man she has seen. As a result of this plot device, the only way that Ariel is able to accomplish this is by utilizing the sexualization of her body. As a result, this is teaching young girls in order to find love and happiness, the important part is that you have a desirable body and over sexualize yourself. The Prince in the Little Mermaid had no knowledge of what Ariel is actually like since she never speaks, thus showing that personality is not nearly as important as being attractive. These very same morales are further evaluated in Rachelle Michelle Johnson’s paper as she analyzes other movies such as “Pocahontas” and “Beauty and the Beast”. While analyzing these, she comes to the same result, that these movies show emphasis on sexualization over personality. The continuous exposure of these messages to these girls develop a new sense of what is important, thus making them feel as though they need to be more attractive to find happiness. …show more content…

For example, Allanah Faherty, developed a list of images denoting the effects that these princesses have. In the images, the Princesses are shown not as the beautiful women that we usually see them, but instead as extremely thin and weak. This is in attempt to represent the effect that they have in developing these anorexic problems. Yet, these photos were publicly denied by many people on the internet. For instance, Bill Otten, one of the top commenters disagrees with the photos when he writes, “Why wont you people just let kids be kids! They don't care about body image at this age!” Bill’s claim that kids don’t care about their body image rests upon the questionable assumption that there is not a subconscious effect on these children while watching these movies. Continuously being presented with the images of beautiful girls effects these children perceptions of reality, thus developing body image problems resulting in anorexia and bulimia. Another commenter, Katie Murphy, agrees with Bill Otten when she writes, “I have never watched a Disney movie and thought that I was fatter than the princess in it or that I needed to look like the princess.” Clearly, it has become common today to dismiss the internal effects that subjecting young girls to these images may have. Even

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