Disney Plus Beatles: Fab Four Fairy Tales in the Production and Reception of 21st Century American Pop
By (Author) Prof Katie Kapurch
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
8th January 2026
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Film, television, radio and performing arts genres
History of specific companies / corporate history
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Disney Plus Beatles shatters the mirror holding the Beatles carefully crafted image and reconstructs the looking glass to reveal its reflecting echoes today. This book explains how Disneyvia the Beatlesshapes the production and reception of 21st century American pop music. The title of the book acknowledges the impact of an international corporation, which began as American animation studio, on the Beatles. But it probes Disneys and the Beatles functions as cultural institutions, an approach that considers gendered, sexual, racial, and other implications of these joined phenomena in the age of streaming platforms like Disney+. After uncovering Disney tropes in visual aesthetics and storytelling related to the Fab Four, the book considers U.S. artists with controlling visions for their multiplatform media, specifically Beyonc, Taylor Swift, Lana Del Rey, and Lil Nas X. As princely auteurs, the pop musicians in this book are perceived as self-made innovators while appearing to create safe spaces for audiences. These Disney dynamicsimpressive prince/adorable princesscultivate appeal, especially among fans who feel deeply personal relationships with these musical phenomena.
Katie Kapurch is Associate Professor of English at Texas State University, USA. She is the author of Victorian Melodrama in the Twenty-First Century (2016) and co-editor of New Critical Perspectives on the Beatles (2016). Her scholarship routinely uses a comparative lens to explore the significance and appeal of gender and very popular subject matter, from the music of the Beatles and their girl fans to Disney fairy-tale films to YA fiction.