Abstract:
Drawing upon theories that reconceptualize toys and artifacts as identity texts, this study employs mediated discourse
analysis to examine children’s videotaped writing and play interactions with princess dolls and stories in one kindergarten
classroom. The study reported here is part of a three-year ethnographic study of literacy play in U.S. early childhood
classrooms. The specific focus here is on young girls who are avid Disney Princess fans and how they address the gendered
identities and discourses attached to the popular films and franchised toys. The study employs an activity model
design that incorporates ethnographic microanalysis of social practices in the classroom, design conventions in toys and
drawings, negotiated meanings in play, and identities situated in discourses. The commercially given gendered princess
identities of the dolls, consumer expectations about the dolls, the author identities in books and storyboards associated
with the dolls, and expectations related to writing production influenced how the girls upheld, challenged, or transformed
the meanings they negotiated for princess story lines and their gender expectations, which influenced who participated
in play scenarios and who assumed leadership roles in peer and classroom cultures. When the girls played with Disney
Princess dolls during writing workshop, they animated identities sedimented into toys and texts. Regular opportunities to
play with toys during writing workshop allowed children to improvise and revise character actions, layering new story
meanings and identities onto old. Dolls and storyboards facilitated chains of animating and authoring, linking meanings
from one event to the next as they played, wrote, replayed, and rewrote. The notion of productive consumption explains
how girls enthusiastically took up familiar media narratives, encountered social limitations in princess identities, improvised
character actions, and revised story lines to produce counternarratives of their own.