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The storybook princesses, Charlie Brown, Rudolph

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As sexual assault survivors continue to share their stories, sparking a worldwide #MeToo reckoning, actress Kristen Bell is publicly expressing concern about “Snow White” and the prince who kissed her without consent.

Bell, who provided the voice of Princess Anna in Disney’s animated film “Frozen,” told Parents magazine that when she reads “Snow White” to her two young daughters, she poses a question: “Don’t you think that it’s weird that the prince kisses Snow White without her permission? Because you cannot kiss someone if they’re sleeping!”

She told the magazine she also warns her 3- and 5-year-old daughters not to take apples — or anything else — from strangers.

“Every time we close Snow White I look at my girls and ask ‘Don’t you think it’s weird that Snow White didn’t ask the old witch why she needed to eat the apple? Or where she got the apple?’" Bell told Parents. “I say, ‘I would never take food from a stranger, would you?’ And my kids are like, ‘No!’ And I’m like, ‘okay, I’m doing something right.’”

Scholarsactivists and other parents have made similar arguments about the “Snow White” kissing scene — saying that Disney’s adaptation of the German fairy tale fosters the wrong ideas about sexual encounters and consent.

In Disney’s 1937 “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” Prince Charming rushes to see Snow White, only to realize he has interrupted the princess’s funeral.

He tells the dwarves to open her casket so he can tell her goodbye. Then he leans over and kisses her lips, prompting the princess to wake up from her slumber.

Kazue Muta, a sociology professor at Osaka University in Japan, wrote on Twitter late last year that children’s stories such as “Snow White” promote sexual violence.

“When you think rationally about ‘Snow White’ and ‘Sleeping Beauty,’ that tell of a ‘princess being woken up by the kiss of a prince,’ they are describing sexual assault on an unconscious person,” she wrote in Japanese, according to Fox News. “You might think I’m ruining the fantasy of it all, but these stories are promoting sexual violence, and I would like everyone to be aware of it.”

Earlier this year, Amnesty International Canada posted a rendition of the children’s classic titled “No Consent = No Fairy Tale,” showing Prince Charming kiss an unconscious Snow White before groping the princess between her legs. A nearby owl interrupts the apparent sexual assault, shouting an expletive and throwing a nut at the prince’s head.

“No, it’s cool,” the prince says in the video. “I’m a prince; she’s a princess. We were going to — you know. We messed around at the party, so we’re just picking up where we left off.”

“But is she into it now?” a frog interrupts.

“What? We should have made a contract or something?” the prince replies.

The video then warns viewers: “Don’t have sex without mutual consent.”

Bell was not the only celebrity mother to express recent concerns about Disney princesses.

Keira Knightley said earlier this week on “The Ellen Show” that her 3-year-old daughter is banned from watching certain children’s movies because they send the wrong message.

“ ‘Cinderella’ — banned,” said Knightley, who played Robin Hood’s daughter in Disney’s “Princess of Thieves.”

“Because, you know, she waits around for a rich guy to rescue her. Don’t. Rescue yourself, obviously.”

“And,” she added, “this is the one that I’m quite annoyed about because I really like the film but ‘Little Mermaid.’ I mean, the songs are great but do not give your voice up for a man. Hello.”

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I don't have a problem with parents using fairy tales to teach their kids life lessons.  That's why the stories were written.

 

“When you think rationally about ‘Snow White’ and ‘Sleeping Beauty,’ that tell of a ‘princess being woken up by the kiss of a prince,’ they are describing sexual assault on an unconscious person,” she wrote in Japanese, according to Fox News. “You might think I’m ruining the fantasy of it all, but these stories are promoting sexual violence, and I would like everyone to be aware of it.”

Guess she's never seen any pepe le pew cartoons. Would've driven the point home better than misconstruing the symbolism of a ‘princess being woken up by the kiss of a prince,’

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