Photo: Ted Kerwin, CC BY 2.0
Seeing as I’m such a Disney fangirl, it may surprise you to know that I’ve never been to any of the Disney parks. My parents claimed (probably correctly) that as a child I would have had no patience with the lines. As an adult, I’m broke. And probably would still have no patience with lines. So I have no skin in the game when I hear about a park attraction being taken out or updated, except to think “well, there’s a ride I won’t get to see in the hypothetical future where I get to go to Disney World.” Other people take it more personally. Especially, it seems, when the changes involve reducing the sexism on what is supposed to be a family-friendly ride.
Apparently there is currently a scene on the Pirates of Caribbean ride that is a “wench sale,” in which animatronic women are sold to pirates who chant “we want the redhead.” God, you can just *feel* the family friendliness, can’t you? Honestly, if I’d known this was a thing, I would have complained about it way earlier. Luckily for my blood pressure, I just found out about it now, when they are planning to change it. Disney is planning to update the scene, making the oft-requested redheaded woman a pirate in her own right, and doing away with all of that tricky “sexual slavery” business.
But cue the hue and cry over “tradition.” Because what is important is keeping things the way they always have been, and not being cowed by SJWs, amirite? Enter the really weird comments. Says commenter J,
So… the defense is that because pirates are also bad, we should keep the scene where a woman is being auctioned off, so that we can have difficult conversations with our children about both piracy and sexual slavery? “I know that Captain Jack Sparrow is your hero, honey, but let me talk to you about Somalia and human trafficking.”
Commenter Alissa writes,
You know, all those SJW-led “mistakes” we lament, like desegregating schools and allowing women the right to vote?
Commenter Fred might take the cake, though.
I know what I am talking about. This is not my first rodeo, I am speaking from experience.
Fred’s right, you guys! What about the fun, romantic side of piracy that involved auctioning women off like cattle? He knows what he’s talking about. This isn’t his first rodeo.
However, as Vivian Kane points out, it is actually totally historically accurate to have women pirates, because hey, there were actually totally women pirates!
The problem with using “tradition” as your metric of value in any given situation is that traditionally, everything has benefited straight, white, usually Christian and able-bodied men. The original Pirates ride was likely designed by and for such men, who also probably didn’t see anything wrong with including a “fun, romanticized” auction of women. Protecting this ride as-is in the name of tradition is protecting the tradition of thoughtless exploitation of women. Sticking too strictly to the origins of any creative property made over fifty years ago (looking at you, Marvel) means sticking to outmoded ways of thought. I’m glad to see that on this particular issue, Disney is going in the way of change. Now, if they could just let go of their relationship with Johnny Depp…
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Elle Irise is a regular contributor to This Week In Tomorrow. When she’s not compelled to explain that maybe “selling women: the ride” might not be the most family friendly-affair, she studies gender in popular culture.
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