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On Disney's "The Princess of North Sudan" and the Audacity of White Entitlement

Tuesday, May 19, 2015 Leave a Comment
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by Kesiena Boom


Disney’s record on racism is less than stellar, and it doesn’t seem like it’s going to be improving anytime soon with the furor surrounding the company’s announcement that a new film, The Princess of North Sudan, is in development. Last Tuesday, The Hollywood Reporter wrote that Stephany Folsom, a well respected screenwriter would be on board to pen the movie, which also boasts Super Size Me’s Morgan Spurlock as a producer. Following the announcement, Black Twitter got its claws out to shine a light on the awfulness of the film’s premise.

The film is based on the true life story of Virginia man named Jeremiah Heaton, and his quest to fulfill a promise to his daughter, after she asked whether or not she would one day be a real princess. Heaton did some research and found what he thought was the perfect solution: a stretch of disputed and unclaimed desert land named Bir Tawil situated between Egypt and Sudan. In June 2014, he decided to fly there, plant his flag (designed by his three children) and stake claim to a brand new “country” that he named The Kingdom of North Sudan, thus making his daughter a “princess.”

Yeah, you read that right. This film will center around a white American man taking his ass to Africa and essentially calling dibs on a piece of land. Does this story ring any bells? The Scramble for Africa, anyone? Heaton has said that he intends to use “his” new kingdom as a “testbed” for cutting edge science to help alleviate the negative effects of climate change. His website calls for donations to go towards setting up what he terms “the best scientific research” for “revolutionary change.”

Heaton’s intentions may be honourable, after all the world sure does need to take serious and immediate action on climate change, but this is sure as hell not the way to do it. In an interview with The Guardian, Heaton said, “I don't see race, color or creed, and neither do my children.” And herein lies the problem. Heaton’s actions reek of entitlement, and his skin color is very much an important part of why this whole mess is so infuriating and insensitive. White people have been carving up and taking parts of Africa to claim as “their own” for years. Heaton’s actions did not take place in a vacuum. They exist in a world that still bears the scars of colonization and the legacy of white people’s unfettered greed and selfishness.



It’s not cute to teach your daughter that the legacy of brutal colonization is no matter when it comes to indulging white children’s every whim. (Indeed, the only reason Bir Tawil is unclaimed territory is because the Sudanese and Egyptian governments disagreed over colonially drawn borders.)

Whichever way you chop it, this entire project started because a white man thought that his precious white daughter’s childhood fantasy was more important than respecting the fact that his lily white butt has no business “claiming” parts of Africa. No. Matter. His. Intentions. It’s just a staggeringly disrespectful move which exhibits a sense of entitlement so strong, you just know it came from a white guy who is used to bending the world to his whims. It doesn’t matter that Bir Tawil doesn’t have any permanent settlements on it. It doesn’t matter that Sudan and Egypt don’t want it. Neither of those factors add together to equate that some dude from Virginia can have it!

When Heaton’s daughter asked him if she’d ever be a princess, he had a few options:
  1. “You’ll always be a princess to me, honey.” (Nauseating but acceptable.)
  2. “No, but that’s okay because the concept of a monarchy is archaic, arbitrary and undemocratic honey.” (Dead-ass true but maybe a bit much for a young girl to comprehend.)
  3. “No, but you can be a doctor or a pilot or a teacher or a nurse or a zoologist or any of the other amazing professions in the world, honey.” (What I would opt for as a parent.)
Notice what’s missing from that list? Oh, yeah, a small exercise in neo-colonialism with a touch of white saviorism.

Why has Disney decided to go anywhere near this mess? I guess Pocahontas just wasn’t enough to fill their quota for movies with a straight-up racist premise. Disney is not known for it's output of radical cinema, so there is no way that this movie will come out in a way that isn’t unacceptable. Scriptwriter Stephany Folsom has said that it would be “gross” to tell the story of a “white girl” being the “princess of an African country,” but hasn’t elaborated on exactly how she’s going to avoid that. Essentially, this whole charade—from Heaton’s real life actions to Disney’s implicit approval of his actions by wanting to turn them into a film—is low key sickening.

It’s 2015, the romanticization of colonialism has got to end. But I’m not holding my breath.

Photo: Twitter / The Washington Post

Kesiena Boom is a Black lesbian feminist and writer who adores Audre Lorde, sisterhood, and the sociology of sexuality. She is twenty one years old. She is a regular contributor at For Harriet and has also written for Autostraddle.com. You can tweet at her via @KesienaBoom.
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        • Margari Aziza 2 days ago
          That's cool, but don't sleep on Muslim twitter and the role of Black and African Muslims in speaking up about this.
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            • bdunham 2 days ago
              Seems like a horrible plot to a movie and father who should learn to say no.
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                  Skeptical Sally 21 hours ago
                  I could see any father wanting to do something like this for his daughter to make her feel special. It has nothing to do what race they are. People have to attack everything these days. If it was a piece of land in Kentucky they wouldn't even notice it I bet, never mind the fact that it's un-owned land and it's not hurting anyone.
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                      unskeptical ursula > Skeptical Sally 14 hours ago
                      That's because it isn't in Kentucky and it happened very much in Africa, where whites have already done their coloniolist damage in nearly the same manner of landing and calling dibs. If this happened in Kentucky, no one would mind because good on him for following US tradition and taking US land that is not his. Instead he goes to Africa, assumes himself a leader, and plans to develop without support from surrounding countries that only left that area alone in respect of each other, and not so anyone--especially a random american-- could come out and claim it.
                      Do not teach priveleged Western children to disrespect African soil. Do not teach children that land must be owned. Do not teach children historical context doesn't matter especially considering white colonialism negatively affects countries to this day.
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                      • blackmoses a day ago
                        "Disney is not known for it's output of radical cinema..."
                        Well, at any rate, not since they sold off Miramax in 2009...
                        ...but at any rate, this movie will either never actually be made (my preference), be revamped into some sort of version soft-sell, preaching the evils of colonialism, or come out and be another embarrassing flop for them (especially given what happened with "The Interview" at Sony).
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                          • Staci Elle a day ago
                            This is sick. White privilege is a powerful drug.
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                                Jno24 a day ago
                                This is such a joke... I can't stand people like you who put every ounce of racism they can muster into an article to get people to hate others. I'm sure there is more to this story, but of course you have latched onto it from the most twisted way possible. There will never be peace or true equality in this county while racist opinionated people such as yourself post such agitating articles. Focus on spreading positivity not trying to turn people against each other. You speak with such harsh generalizations and hate, and therefore are no better than the "racist" race who you are so upset with.
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                                  • Caleb DuGuay (DJ Wolfmouse) > Jno24 13 hours ago
                                    You are on point. Racism is a terrible disease in society, and lack of empathy towards things that happen in the past is the worst form of ignorance. All of that is true, but this person writes as though they do this intentionally to make light of a terrible time in history. I am almost 100% that not one person in the production of this movie, or whatever it was based on, thought for one second about the corrilation that the writer of this article pointed out. It's common in the news to stir the pot of society's rage to get views, but this is outrageous.
                                    I know many black people personally. I see them as equals on this earth, no matter race, creed, faith, sexuality, or anything else that may set us apart. What the writer proposes is not racism. What's racist is puting a particular color of skin in a bad light for things that nearly all of them have never done, but their ancestors. And you are yourself being racist if you immediately believe that all, or even most, people with white skin are pretentious or think lesser of people of color.
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