“This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play

Many children, but predominantly young girls, gravitate towards princess play. In response to previous academic findings suggesting that princess play is always detrimental to young children's developing perspectives of femininity, this qualitative study explores the potential for gender-creati...

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Main Author: Cayley Burton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010975
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spelling doaj-50ae56e957c64744b7772435f601c2e42021-06-03T14:45:13ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-05-0175e06994“This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess playCayley Burton0Corresponding author.; The University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, British Columbia (BC), CanadaMany children, but predominantly young girls, gravitate towards princess play. In response to previous academic findings suggesting that princess play is always detrimental to young children's developing perspectives of femininity, this qualitative study explores the potential for gender-creativity during this roleplaying game. In an effort to refute the pre-existing literature, the current case study asks the following question: To what extent does princess play offer creative or confining possibilities for childhood feminine expression? While much of the literature in early childhood education (ECE) indicates that Disney is the sole inspiration for every child's construction of this imagination game, the findings in this article indicate that Disney is one influence among many for focal participants. Using open coding to analyze data generated during play-based interviews with two cisgender girls, this article demonstrates that the creative possibilities of princess play remain underrepresented in research. Although princess play offers only partial potential for non-stereotypical feminine expression, gender normativity can be actively challenged, especially when adults support and encourage unconventional formats of princess play during early childhood.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010975Early childhoodPlay-basedFemininityPrincess playGender-creativeDisney
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cayley Burton
spellingShingle Cayley Burton
“This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
Heliyon
Early childhood
Play-based
Femininity
Princess play
Gender-creative
Disney
author_facet Cayley Burton
author_sort Cayley Burton
title “This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
title_short “This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
title_full “This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
title_fullStr “This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
title_full_unstemmed “This is a different kingdom”: A case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
title_sort “this is a different kingdom”: a case study of gender-creative feminine expression during princess play
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Many children, but predominantly young girls, gravitate towards princess play. In response to previous academic findings suggesting that princess play is always detrimental to young children's developing perspectives of femininity, this qualitative study explores the potential for gender-creativity during this roleplaying game. In an effort to refute the pre-existing literature, the current case study asks the following question: To what extent does princess play offer creative or confining possibilities for childhood feminine expression? While much of the literature in early childhood education (ECE) indicates that Disney is the sole inspiration for every child's construction of this imagination game, the findings in this article indicate that Disney is one influence among many for focal participants. Using open coding to analyze data generated during play-based interviews with two cisgender girls, this article demonstrates that the creative possibilities of princess play remain underrepresented in research. Although princess play offers only partial potential for non-stereotypical feminine expression, gender normativity can be actively challenged, especially when adults support and encourage unconventional formats of princess play during early childhood.
topic Early childhood
Play-based
Femininity
Princess play
Gender-creative
Disney
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010975
work_keys_str_mv AT cayleyburton thisisadifferentkingdomacasestudyofgendercreativefeminineexpressionduringprincessplay
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