References

1) Lin, C. A. (2001). The VCR, home video culture, and new video technologies. In J. Bryant & J. A. Bryant (Eds.), Television and the American family (2nd ed.) (pp.91-107). Mahwah, B. NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.


2) Kaiser Family Foundation. (1999). Kids and media at the new millennium. Retrieved April 18, 2003, from www.kff.org.

3) Papalia, D.E., Gross, D., & Feldman, RD. (2003). Childhood development: A topical approach. New York, NY: McGraw-HilI.

4) Bryant, J.,& Bryant, J. A. (Eds.) (2001). Television and the American family (2nd ed.). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

5) Maio, Kathie. "Disney - Disney's Dolls." The People, the Ideas, the Action in the Fight for Global Justice | New Internationalist. N.p., n.d. Web. 3 Dec. 2015. <http://www.newint.org/issue308/dolls.html>.

6) Towbin, Mia Adessa, et al. "Images of Gender, Race, Age, and Sexual Orientation in Disney Feature-Length Animated Films." Journal of Feminist Family Therapy, 15:4, 2004, p. 19-44.

7)O'Brien, P .C. (1996). The happiest films on earth: A textual and contextual analysis of
Walt Disney's Cinderella and The Little Mennaid. Women's Studies in

Communication, 19(2), 155-183.

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