Accommodating Dory, but Disempowering Dopey? Dilemmas of Disability from Snow White to Finding Dory

In Richard B. Davis, Disney and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 59–69 (2019-10-03)
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Abstract

In the author's dual identities of Disney fanatic and philosopher of disability, he was as delighted as a five‐year‐old on their first trip to the Magic Kingdom to see the progress that Disney had made in Finding Dory by depicting what philosophers call the social model of disability. In contrast to the social model of disability, people often see the medical model, in which disability is understood as an individual problem to be remedied through medical treatment or charity. Not to get too far ahead of themselves, but Dopey from Snow White is a perfect illustration of a character with a disability portrayed in terms of the medical model. Keep pondering that while people consider a darker side to the Finding Dory disability paradise, one that reveals it is only a wonderful world for those who can speak.

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Kevin Mintz
Stanford University

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