^True.
Jasmine and Aurora are INFJ though, for comparison.
She's an ENFP... She had to restrain herself to protect her sister and family, which forced her to act like an INFJ... but ENFP is her natural mode... whereas INFJ is the forced mode... I guess...
Aurora has so little awake screentime it's hard to tell. Haven't watched Aladinn in ten years, but I know her typings are pretty varied on the net. I've seen ENTP and ENFJ.
What do you reckon Elsa is?
Oh I'm good with INFJ on her - she has that same duty/martyr effect -at least at first. It's nice to see her embrace herself though instead of sacrificing herself in the name of duty forever.
Jasmine is the kind of INFJ focused on a vision, I feel. She has a certain idea of how things should be and uses her Fe to either disrupt social standards and shock people to wake them up, or encourage them to do what she considers is right. She's also the more prickly but true to herself-type, aka a bit heavy on the tertiary Ti (and invested in being considered valuable for more than just a decorative piece of furniture).
Compare her to Esmeralda for ENFJ vs INFJ: visionary vs demagogue. Both have a vision, but Esmeralda is way more hands and relies heavily on her social charm on whereas Jasmine is more strategic and distancing.
As for Aurora, she does get little screen time, but she is the perfect martyr example. She has prophetic dreams/visions about what her destiny is (Once Upon A Dream), yet when she is confronted with her 'duty'/supposed destiny, she falls apart because her plan/destiny has fallen apart, yet accepts her new fate and sets out to fulfil her duty - for the greater good. Add that all to the demure, elegant aura she has and the archetypal play she does with the animals (aka play pretending her prince is there) and you've got yourself an NF - and an INFJ at that.
What "vision" does Elsa has? She acepts what her parents say and acts accordingly for as long as she can force herself to, but I haven't seen any indication of what she actually agrees with it. If anything, "Let It Go" points to her having very different ideas about her powers in contrast to what she's been taught.
It seeems like you have a penchant for seeing martyrs in the princesses. I see absolutely no such a thing in Aurora, because she doesn't get a say in anything that happens. She's a victim of the cirunstances (as Elsa) and an incredibly passive character. As for her "aura" and her playing with animals and making believe, that's hardly an argument for type.
Where's Aurora's Ni? And her Fe? I see neither.
I just can't take typing based on archetypals seriously, you gotta go with functions and build from there.
You could have just said, "because I like her and I think I am one too," OP.
Actually, I don't.
I still think Elsa is INTJ. I don't see Fe from her. Also Anna is ESFP so this makes the whole Fire/Ice duality work well
Yes, Elsa is INFJ. INFJs always have a kernel of power-hunger beneath all the fe propriety, pointed self sacrifice, and pseudo-aristocratic, too-good-for-this-world retirement.
Because a type can be contained in a highly stereotypied and negative sentence like this .
I don't see the sentence as either stereotyped (is it a stereotype that INFJs secretly want power?) or negative (is it a bad thing to be ambitious?). The point is that XXFJs often like to see themselves and their fe as gentle, tolerant, and cooperative, but that describes their methods, not their goals. Fe is still a judging function, so XXFJs still have an idea of how things should be (especially NFJs, since ni lends itself well to strong opinions and ideas), which they want to see actualized in the world. They might prefer to do so through pro-social means, but the desire is still there. It's often repressed along with inferior se though, leading to a withdrawal from the world and the sublimation of what are seen as "base" desires to have a strong effect on it. This effect is compounded when theses desires are socially unacceptable, which triggers the XNFJ's fe and encourages them to internalize these negative judgments (which is particularly easy for introverted INFJs, of course) and direct their considerable will against themselves, where it manifests as strong and ruthless self-control. Hence, the INFJ's withdrawal from the world can be seen as a kind of self-sacrifice, with the INFJ suppressing their agency to protect social harmony, and taking up the role of observer, rather than participant. But this role is actually very unnatural to the INFJ, being a judger and a se-user. It is the INFP who truly wishes to withdraw from the world, not the INFJ. Eventually, the INFJ's inferior se will inevitably come into play, and the INFJ will release all their pent-up judgmental energy on the external world in the blunt, direct, almost involuntary manner which characterizes both se and inferior functions. Since acceptance and integration of the inferior function is a healthy development in Jungian psychology, this release can be seen as the INFJ reaching their full potential.
I do not see what you described in Elsa because her withdrawal from the world isn't voluntary at all. She has a choice made for her at the beginning and when she goes away later on, the sentiments expressed in "Let It go" lyrics are not indicative of Se, but of Fi. She finally expresses what she thinks of her powers and how she feels about having to suppress them.
Elsa makes the choice to leave in the face of social disapproval. Nobody forces her to do it. A te user would have pointed out that the disapproval of her subjects didn't really matter on account of her being queen and them not, and proceeded to rule well enough that they'd forget about it. A ti user would have argued that the ice powers would not hinder her ability to rule, and might actually help, if she used them to defend the kingdom. A fi user might have left, but would never have become ashamed of the powers before hand (self acceptance even if they're different is kind of their thing, you know?). So we see that, in her internalizing other people's negative emotional judgments, and making choices that show an inability to cope with social disapproval, Elsa displays fe. As for the idea that she's fi because she "expresses what she thinks of her powers and how she feels about having to suppress them": fe users have feelings too, and are more want to express them than fi users. A fi user would have expressed them much earlier, but Elsa waits for external emotional stimulus I.E. the reveal and the disapproval that followed. She feels her emotions in tandem with others, not by herself (contrast that with Anna, who gets her big "this is how I feel" songs in the first few minutes of the movie, with no-one else providing emotional stimulus. It's all in her head.)