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Cartoonish Gender

Cartoonish Gender

Queer representation in children’s entertainment has never been better, but the road to get here has been fraught. We look at how Sailor Moon broke new ground, in spite of U.S. censors, and why Disney has struggled to move past having queer-coded villains.

Imaginary Worlds · Eric Molinsky | Daylight Media

September 2, 202132m 9s

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Show Notes

Queer representation in children’s cartoons has never been better, but the road to get here has been fraught. I talk with podcaster Dawn H and journalist Sara Century about how the first type of queer representation they saw in cartoons came from Sailor Moon – or at least a highly edited and strangely dubbed English-language version that tried to scrub away all the queer content, somewhat unsuccessfully. And I talk with podcaster Thomas J. West and YouTube essayist Rowan Ellis about the history of queer-coded villains in Disney cartoons, and how the biggest entertainment company in the world still has a lot of catching up to do.

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