preview

Analysis Of Female Stereotypes In Disney Film Mulan

Decent Essays

In addition to the two Disney films we discussed earlier, another Disney film that illustrates these stereotypes is Mulan. While the film attempted to challenge the ideology that women can’t be adept warriors too, they didn’t do so without leaving some twisted gender perceptions behind — most prominently seen in the two songs “I’ll Make a Man Out of You” and “A Girl Worth Fighting For.” The first song, “I’ll Make a Man Out of You” implies that in order to be a great warrior, you must be a man and asks “did they send me daughters when I asked for sons?” This suggests to children that sons are the only people adept for war and that fighting is a masculine thing to do, similarly to what we saw in Gaston’s song. It reiterates how men are “supposed” to be masculine, powerful creatures incapable of feeling emotions other than anger or lust. It also shines light on the question of why are young women not more inclined to join the military? Because they haven’t been primed their entire life for it. They’ve either been told to trade their military men for barbies or that women aren’t meant for war. And although Mulan tried to change that by showing young girls that women could be warriors, she was only successful in the place of a man’s shadow.
The song, “A Girl Worth Fighting For” displays some of the female stereotypes seen through the film. For example, it proclaims that the men’s women must be “paler than the moon with eyes that shine like stars.” She must also awe at his

Get Access