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Visual Rhetorical Analysis Essay

Decent Essays

Visual Rhetorical Analysis

This is a visual Rhetorical analysis of the X-men portrayal of a stereotype conveyed via film. It is a fiction movie that implies a near future where humanity begins to see a new race appear. The new race are mutants who are equipped with strange and varied powers; these mutants are grouped into two categories: those who advocate the integration and understanding with humanity, led by Dr. Charles Xavier and in the other category those seeking confrontation with the human race as inferior and hates them, directed by Magnus, best known as Magneto, a dangerous mutant with extraordinary powers. However, I will be focusing on Rogue, a teenager mutant whose power is on her skin. She absorbs powers or memory from other …show more content…

An example of this is gay people who are being rejected just because they have a different sexual orientation from others, and they are afraid that if their families find out they will be pushed away.

In X-men, mutants and non-mutants are fighting between those who are trying to help the human race and those who want to destroy them. Eventually, they started to do many things to be acceptable to society like changing their appearances and their opinions so they can live peacefully between non-mutants. X-men also show different races that are at war between each other. Teenage mutants can be dangerous because they do not know of their mutant powers, and they can be developed at any point of their life time.

This movie, although it has a time frame that lasts two or three hours, it can be recorded on DVD to be view later on, one story at a time. At a point of their life mutants, have difficulties when their powers manifest without them expecting it. Particularly, teenagers can be isolated from their loved ones. Rogue plans with his boyfriend to set off an adventure prior to college. After she kissed him, her powers started to manifest, causing her terror and eventually she left

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