Help with dissertation - Parenting in Pixar films

I am currently writing my thesis on Pixar films, especially with regard to parenting and the depiction of home life in Pixar movies.

I am hoping for any insights that you may have. My second chapter (the first being a general overview of Pixar’s history with Disney, Steve Jobs etc) is going to be focused generally on Toy Story, A Bugs Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters Inc, Cars and Ratatouille… looking at things like Mike and Sully acting as surrogate parents to Boo, or Woody and Buzz looking after Andy for example…

The third chapter will focus on case studies of The Incredibles and Finding Nemo as I percieve these to be the films that focus most directly on family and are basically polar opposites of the same continuum. Finding Nemo revolves around a single fathers search to find his lost son, who he has not let mature and has protected him from learning life skills, also we find other characters like Crush, a laid back parent, and Gil who plays like a demi-father to Nemo and allows him to learn things on his own. The Incredibles depicts the nuclear family with the father being the protector (strong and muscly) and the mother taking care of the house and rearing the children (flexible).

I am going to post this thread on all the feature forums so please feel free to comment about any of the films on this one or go to the relevent thread and discuss it their.

Please please please only constructive feedback only, this is pretty important for me.

Thank you to anyone who replies!!!

Good luck. (You’re going to need it. Mwahahahaha!)

Oh, I don’t have to. TSS can say it prefectly. Ahem, uh, TSS? :wink:

Well you got the two parents right. Bob, like most fathers in this day in age, has to be the strong man of support for the family. And that is also one of the reasons why the director gave him super strength. And while yes he earns money for the family, he also loves them and would do anything to protect them, “I CAN’T LOSSE YOU AGAIN!!! I can’t, not again. I’m not. . .strong enough.”

Helen was given the power of Elasticity because most moms have to take care of the house, the kids, drive them to school, grocery shop, cook dinner, clean the house, babysit, and you probably get my point. Moms today are streching and trying to be so flexible to work everything out. FOr instance, in the beginging of the film, she is seen bathing Jack-Jack, then picking up Dash, then Violet from school. After that, she, makes dinner for the family.