Disney and Popular Culture: A Celebration of 100 Years of Disney

Author:   Amanda Rutherford ,  Sarah Baker
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
ISBN:  

9783032067357


Pages:   195
Publication Date:   23 January 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Disney and Popular Culture: A Celebration of 100 Years of Disney


Overview

As The Walt Disney Company celebrates 100 years of fairy-tale magic, this collection of essays encapsulates this long and successful journey. From its beginnings as Laugh-O-Gram in the early 1920s, the two-man operation has become a multi-billion-dollar corporation that is a world leader in media communications. Their magical stories have continued across generations, supported by film, theme parks, and merchandise, all of which have made Disney a household name. This collection seeks to celebrate these stories, both historically and within present-day times, examining the relevance and importance of the world of Disney in popular culture.

Full Product Details

Author:   Amanda Rutherford ,  Sarah Baker
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN:  

9783032067357


ISBN 10:   3032067359
Pages:   195
Publication Date:   23 January 2026
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction – A Century of Disney - Amanda Rutherford and Sarah Baker.- Time, Design, and Method.- 2. Tales of time: 100 years of Walt Disney’s magic - Amanda Rutherford.- 3. The Enduring Influence of Walt Disney on User Experience (UX) Design - Ricky Tucker, UX/UI designer for Louisiana's Office of Technology Services.- 4. Mary Blair & the Making of Cinderella (1950)  - Gabrielle Stecher, PhD, Associate Director of Undergraduate Teaching and Lecturer in the Department of English at Indiana University Bloomington.- 5. Marvel's medieval Thor - Kevin Fylan, MLitt in Viking Studies, PhD candidate at University College Cork in Ireland.- 6. Animating Emotions: Exploring Emotional Memory in Disney and Pixar Films Focusing on its representation forms, meanings, and effects - Kyoung-suk Sung, PhD, Max Planck Institute, Berlin, German.- De-and-Reconstructing gender.- 7. Waiting for New Princes Charming. Male Identity from Fairy Tale to the Disney Universe - Dalia Forni, PhD, Uniersity of Florence, Italy.- 8. Body modification to win a prince: The Cinderella tale of enhancement in modern society - Amanda Rutherford.- 9. Sounding Silence: Fathoming the Feminist Dialogics of Walt Disney’s The Little Mermaid  -Maryna Matlock, PhD. Dept of English Alumna, Ohio State University.- 10. A Whole New World: Reinventing the Fairy Tale Prince in Disney - Ritika Chhabra, MA student, Shiv Nadar University, India.- Expanding representations of family.- 11. From Heteronormative to Queer Kinship: Disney’s Patterns of Parenthood over the Century - Thanong Aupitak, PhD candidate American Studies at the University of Hamburg, Germany.- 12. “The Stars Don’t Shine, They Burn”: Perfectionism in Disney’s Encanto (2021)  - Jelena Pataki Šumiga, PhD candidate in Literature and Cultural Identity Studies. University of Osijek, Croatia.- 13. “The Perfect Child, The Strong One, and The Cycle Breaker: Personifying Intergenerational Trauma Responses in Disney’s Encanto - Julie Thompson, Assistant professor of English at Burman University in Alberta, Canada.-14. In and out and In again: Disney’s now you see it now you don’t queer representation - Sarah Baker.- Monsters at the door.- 15. Creepiest Place on Earth: The Dark Side of Disney - Sarah Baker.- 16. Delight in the Gruesome and Grim: The Appeal of Villains Who Know They’re Bad - Nicholas Galante, MA, Trinity College Dublin.- 17. “He’s more machine now than man; twisted and evil”: Gothic Villains and Technology in the Star Wars Sequel Trilogy - Antonio Sanna, PhD,University of Sassari, Italy.- 18. The Aggressive Side of the Natural World: Character Transformation through Nonhuman Violence in Recent Disney Films - Rachel Carazo, M.A. English, B.A. Asian Studies. MSc Ancient Worlds candidate University of Edinburgh.

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Author Information

Amanda Rutherford is a Lecturer in the School of Language and Culture at Auckland University of Technology, Aotearoa, New Zealand. Sarah Baker is an Associate Professor in the School of Communication Studies at Auckland University of Technology, Aotearoa, New Zealand.

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