It’s Gratitude
Monday, and today I’m grateful to have found this story about Austin, Texas,
photographer Jamie Moore.
For her daughter’s
fifth birthday earlier this year, Moore shot a series of pictures that honors
both potential and achievement: the anti-Disney-Princess approach to what a
young girl could look forward to.
She chose icons like
Earhart, Chanel and Goodall, and made some amazing images. One example here:
The rest are on Moore’s
website on the “Not
just a girl” page.
What I like about
these choices is that the subjects are not perfect by any means. They are
tough, confident women whose dreams took them to places many others didn’t want
them to be. They flew—literally and figuratively—against the winds of their
times; they occasionally crashed and burned. But they kept on.
Since the original
story broke (I found it in The Guardian), Moore is looking for contributors
to expand the project by photographing girls from all around the world in
conjunction with other female role models—Marie Curie, Ada Lovelace, Josephine
Baker, Doris Lessing, Christine de Pisan, Phyllis Wheatley. Well —the list could include hundreds. It's a great project.
Look—I’m not
unalterably opposed to Disney princesses. In fact, I quite like Mulan. But the notion
that little girls can learn about and aspire to be more than an all-singing
all-dancing Barbie is refreshing. You can fly
against the prevailing winds in ways large and small, and maybe start with a
photograph and the knowledge that others have done the same thing.
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