A heroine is always someone a group of women like to see in films that really show off our assets. I am not talking about our bodies either, but the strong leadership we obtain that is only expressed every once in awhile. It is good for women to feel strong, to feel good about themselves in a power role rather than a defenseless character role. This is an idea we can pass through future children so they can get an idea of what their true capabilities are. One such way to do this, is in films. Children are very impressionable, and soak up information given to them through creative means. One such example, is Disney. The films are known for teaching lessons and meanings of life in an easy to understand way, featuring happiness and sadness, loss and what you can gain from that. For young girls growing up to fit their awesome girl shoes, I would recommend Mulan. The film not only fits into the criteria of a great Disney movie, it also teaches important life lessons that meet children’s creative needs as well.
Titled Mulan not only because of the story, but after her actual name, the story follows young Mulan as a woman who simply can not find her place in the strict oppressive roles women have been placed in at that day and age. When the story comes that the Huns have invaded China, a looming realization overcomes her village that her people will have to serve in war once more; including her father. Devastated at the news, Mulan decides she only has one decision: let her father
Only men were able join the army, if women went to the army, it would be punishable by death. The villain was also a man, insinuating again, that men are the only strong and resilient gender. Mulan goes to war in spite of her father telling her he would be willing to do it, even though he is a female.
When Mulan returns home, she returns to the normal expectations of a woman which puzzles her comrades. “Traveling together for twelve years, they didn’t know Mulan was a girl. ‘The he-hare’s feet go hop and skip, the she-hare’s eyes are muddled and fuddled. Two hares running side by side close to the ground. How can they tell if I am he or she?’” (Frankel). Mulan relays the difference between men and women but also states that when both are faced with an obstacle like war, there really is no difference between them. Therefore, Mulan becomes a master of both the worlds of men and
Mulan, a tale of adventure and honor, is not only an engaging film to watch, but it also contains an amazing amount of historical accuracy concerning religions in China. The film Mulan is historically accurate in its portrayal of Daoist ideas, the expected behavior of women according to Confucianism, and Confucian relationships.
Lorraine Hansberry’s play, A Raisin in the Sun, depicts the lives of the Younger family, an African American family living in the Southside of Chicago during the 1950s. The play takes place in their cramped apartment offering the reader insight into the arguments, discussions, and conversations that take place between the characters. In one scene, Hansberry specifically offers the reader a conversation between Asagai, an influential companion, and Beneatha to show us how disparate the Younger siblings, Beneatha and Walter, are. As Asagai looks at Beneatha, he sees “what the New World has finally wrought.” Similarly, Beneatha takes a look at Walter and says, “Yes, just look at what the New World hath finally wrought” with an enraged
It all begins with the call to adventure. Mulan hears her father being called to fight for the emperor in a war against the Huns.. Outraged as she was, she pleaded for her father to not be taken away, as he already fought for the emperor in the past. Her
She was a woman in China therefore, she was expected to take on the role of wife, mother (eventually), and daughter of China. This created a role strain because Mulan wasn’t that kind of daughter of China. She was meant to be a warrior of China. A protector, not a submissive, but this was common in Chinese culture during this time period. This treatment of women was a stigma that was often accepted because of the underestimation and disrespect that most men had towards women. Men expected women to please them and cook, clean, and bear children for them. But that was not in the cards for Mulan. She ended up overcoming all of these stigmas when she completes training and came out on top. But Mulan’s journey from woman to warrior was not an easy one because she had to constantly hide herself from the others and she also had to fight
Mulan for instance, being a girl, saved China from the Hans. Even though she pretended to be a man in the beginning, she ended up saving the emperors life as a girl. To add on that, she dressed her male friends as women as well to distract Han’s army. The director of Mulan used the female identity to its full advantage rather than bringing out her insecurities and her weaknesses. Mulan is a true hero.
Mulan is a Disney animated film that takes place in ancient China during Han Dynasty War. Mulan is a young girl in China, the only child of her honored family who struggles to find her identity and meaning in society. While Mulan is a lovable, spirited girl who doesn’t fit in with Chinese tradition because she speaks her mind and follow her heart. Being a girl who experience culture, gender role, and self-image demonstrated what a non- tradition person will do to bring honor to her love one’s and the family.
In the movie Mulan by Tony Bancroft and Barry Cook the directors show a women named Mulan who pretends to be a man to fight in the chinese war. The war emerges when the Huns invade China. The storyline of the movie takes place in China during the Hans dynasty. Mulan pretends to be a man so she can take her father’s place since he is too old to fight. Mulan takes her father’s armor and sword and escapes to the camp. Mulan signs up for war and she goes to a training camp. Being a man was difficult for Mulan. However she did obtain help from her two sidekicks Mushu a small dragon, and Cricket a lucky cricket. Mulan does experience some obstacles during her training. Some obstacles Mulan comes across to are reaching an arrow at the top of a pole and running up
For young children it is easy to be carefree about your future. It is not until you are an adolescent that you begin to see what is important and what is expected of you. In the Walt Disney motion picture Mulan the title character is being tested by what her traditions and society expects of her. The film touches on numerous concepts on childhood and what society expects of children in China. She has to exist in a community where her gender has expectations set for young females. She has strict traditional expectations set by her family for her age, in which she is to be prepared to seek out a husband. War begins to threaten the community and her father who is aging and ill is expected to go and serve. Her instinct to protect her aging father leads her to make a decision and to begin the journey to find out who she is on inside. Mulan embarks in a self quest to find out who she really is and goes against all the social construction that society has set out for her.
A Raisin in the Sun is about the dream of the Youngers, a black family living in South Side Chicago in the 1950s. Like any family, the Youngers’ dream is a stitched-together mosaic; as they impatiently wait for the arrival of an insurance check for ten thousand dollars, each member of the Younger clan has a slightly different dream for the money. Yet when the check actually arrives, their dreams collide. Even as the dream of each relation moves closer to reality, the family fragments. The struggle between material desires and family ideals escalates into a heavy and bittersweet drama. There are a couple of prominent themes throughout A Raisin in the Sun. There’s the obvious theme to follow and work hard for your dreams, the importance of having a healthy family relationship and pride.
Now she is able to be who she wants to be, rather who everyone had once wanted her to be. Mulan’s story is a good example of Campbell’s Hero’s Journey because of how it analyzes the Mulan as a person through her journey. Mulan begins as somewhat weak young girl unable to please her parents because she isn’t able to attract a man for marriage. But then we see that she cares much more in protecting her family rather than finding someone to spend her future with in the way she decides to take her father’s place despite the consequences. Now we see her as a mature young woman with a strong will, who cares more for protecting and honoring her family over finding a man who will take care of
Mulan made a very brave decision to join the army and much of what she later has to do is completely opposite of gender norms.
As Mulan’s father is enlisted to fight in the war, Mulan rebels against her gender role and speaks out on the drafting of her injured father who would unquestionably die to protect his country. Noticeably having crossed a line, she is shamed for her outburst and is now determined more than ever to bring her family honor. Mulan sets off to fight under her family’s name portraying the male role of a man named Ping. Under this role, Mulan begins to find her true identity, which is not necessarily that of a man, but of a single individual who is strong-minded and brave. As she prepares for war, Mulan leaves behind a flower pin from her hair and this flower reoccurs throughout the film. The flower represents her leaving behind this societal view of femininity as she
In A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry, the Younger family is trying to achieve the American Dream, which is “the ideals of freedom, equality, and opportunity traditionally held to be available to every American”(cite dictionary.com). The Youngers are a black family living in a poor part of Chicago. They inherit ten thousand dollars because Mama’s husband died. Mama is the matriarch of the Younger family. Each family member has their own idea about how to use this money to fulfill their dreams, and the play uses the decisions of the family members and other characters to show the reader that people’s actions are not always motivated by what they appear to be. Mama wants to use the money to buy a house in a white neighborhood, because she thinks it is a better environment for her family than their current living conditions and will benefit her family. Although there are a number of people in A Raisin in the Sun who appear too want to help the Younger family, Mama shows through her decision to buy the house that she is the only person that is looking out for the best interests of her family.