Crystal Clay's Focused Freewriting on How The Disney Movie Mulan Taught Me How to Accept Myself
Mulan is strong
She never let anyone tell her what to do and she did not conform to societies rules
She fought for her own reasons and did not just do what everyone told her to do
Even though she was different she accepted herself the way she was and still did something really amazing
Even though she has Shang's help she didn't need him to be strong, she did that on her own.
It took me to see another woman except herself for being different before I could see that I wasn't the freak everyone told me I was
My parents always told me that everyone was different and we should except that but before I watched Mulan I thought I was just to different.
saw her as being a determined individual that knew what she wanted. Everyone saw the same
She felt like a loner. She was fighting her mum a lot, and said to her mother "maybe there's something else you'd like to find wrong with me while you're at it!" She didn't think about what other people felt. She was a
worked against him for the good of her country. Her heroic life was especially shown by her
dedication and diligence she took in being a good student from elementary through high school.
She even ended up with a child along the way. A native woman gave her a girl when she stopped at a bar along the roadside. All of these events were drastic changes in the way that she lived her life, but they all turned out for the better.
The idea of feminism has not always been common. The term “feminism” wasn’t introduced until the 1970s. This shows how society didn’t allow anything that had to due with everyone being equal because of the standards that society constructed. In all the versions of Mulan, I think that Disney’s Mulan was the most strict on her having Ancient China’s role of being a woman. This would be having kids, helping clean around the house and not working for money, but working for her husband and kids. In Disney’s Mulan, her family is more hard on her to be a lady and for her to be the proper role of a women. This is because they went to a “matchmaker” to find her husband, and after saving everyone several times, she was still looked down upon because she was a woman.
she was also one of the bravest people there are, and she never gave up a step of the way.
Freedom Writers is a movie based on the book The Freedom Writers Diary by teacher Erin Gruwell. The movie was directed by Richard LaGravenese and it was released in 2007. This movie discusses significant themes such as stereotyping and racial discrimination but most important the power of tolerance and understanding. The purpose of this movie is to promote the message that knowledge is power and in a world filled with disparities where hundreds of ethnic groups convey and interact humans are obliged to accept and tolerate the differences that define each person. This film is a perfect example of how these rhetorical components are used to create an effective argument. The director of the movie as well as the characters build their
received beatings if she misbehaved. She was also taught how unimportant she was as a woman. Sexually she was told she was to be seductive and submissive, she was only there to satisfy the male. She was taught to be very feminine and obedient. However, she was not always obedient. At the age of 15 she told the
She let her pride overtake her and she lost. As you can from Ronda and Odysseus, it is best for your
When her father passed away she had nobody to tell her what to do and how to act. This was very devastating and she had a hard time dealing with change. So much so that she wouldn't let the police take the body of her father out of the house for three days after his death. The only thing that was constant in her house was the slave
cope with the events in her life because she was so adapted to being told how to think and
Freedom Writers was an inspirational movie for all current and future teachers. Erin Gruwell’s passion as she accepts the position as an English teacher in a racially divided high school is outstanding. She went above and beyond to do whatever was possible for her students to receive the best education. In the classroom, she saw the struggles each student was facing and soon accommodated to what their interest were.
She found family annoying. She found new things a threat. She even found life useless.