Mulan Essay

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    Walt Disney movie Mulan is based on a legendary figure. The real story is quite similar to the movie. Mulan is based on a woman from ancient China. She's usually described in Chinese poem known as the Ballad of Mulan. According to Scribe, in ballad, “Hua Mulan [took] her aged father's placed in the army.” she was known for her skilled martial art and sword, although was not highlighted in the movie. She fought for twelve years and gained high merit, but refused. Mulan the movie is set in China during

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    Mulan Character Traits

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    all of China as well. Mulan is a young girl struggling with her own sense of purpose in a world that she feels out of place in. She does not believe she fits into the pre-determined role of a beautiful woman whose only role is to serve a man that chooses her. This identity crisis leads her to some big decisions. She secretly takes her father’s place in the Chinese military to protect her ailing father and uphold the Fa family’s honor by pretending to be a boy. (Cook) Mulan is intelligent, she challenges

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    Mulan, another Disney princess film, was released in 1998 during a wave of feminism. At first glance, Mulan seems like a feminist film encouraging individual empowerment of women. However, the film is not free of the traditional stereotypes. Disney does try to get rid of the stereotypical “Damsel in distress” story, but, upon watching the movie a couple more times, one can see that it isn’t as feminist as it first appeared. Mulan strengthens a binary understanding of gender stereotypes the privilege

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    The movie and the poem about Mulan are similar but in a lot of ways also very distinctively different. Mulan's story indicates that she is genuinely audacious and will do anything to keep her father from having to go to battle. “I want to buy a saddle and horse, and serve in my father’s place.” (line 15-16) She knew in her heart that she was going against everything she learned as a little girl but she had to do this. The movie and poem about Mulan are similar because the soldiers find out she's

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    Attila The Mulan Essay

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    taught. Walt Disney Animation Studios since its very beginnings created films with a clear, morally unambiguous plot line in which good must always overcome evil, no matter how challenging the process. In the year 1998, when Mulan, Disney Studio's adaptation of The Ballad of Hua Mulan, was released, the concept of presenting Chinese or any Eastern people in a negative way was quite foolish, particularly since Disney products are marketed around the world. Therefore a villain was needed, one that would

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    In Mulan, the stereotype of an obedient women, good housewife, and beautiful women who are married off is presented. When I see the heroine of the movie she conforms to the Asian race appearance, she has the common sexual identity of heterosexual, she is able-bodied and young. Mulan goes against her Asian culture of how women are supposed to be, a terrible housewife, clumsy, and has a hard time being obedient. She tries to fit into the stereotype in order to appease her parents. When her father is

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    Death is an inevitable element of military conflict. There cannot be a movie that focuses on war and does not touch upon the topic of death. Disney's Mulan approaches that motif in a very unconventional way. It does not carry the universal message “killing under any circumstances is wrong,” rather it creates a clear riftr between what is good and what is bad and what can be forgiven on the behalf of the greater good. Judith Butler, an American philosopher and gender theorist, wrote that [t]here

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    Fighting for her father’s survival, Mulan, signs up for the Chinese army in hopes of restoring her family’s honor where it is illegal for a woman to join. She later encounters her ancestor/guardian, Mushu, who is a mini dragon. It is in the army that she meets Shang, the handsome young general. Mulan completes many of the tasks thrown at her with hard work and great enjoyment but in the process falls for the young man. In this intense and heart-warming movie titled, Mulan, together the duo overcome the

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    (Emperor in China). Directed by Tony Bancroft and Barry Cook, released by Walt Disney Pictures in 1998, Mulan is an animated movie of a young girl that fears her ailing father will be drafted into the Chinese military. Mulan takes his spot though she is a girl living under a patriarchal regime, meaning she is unqualified to serve. She then impersonates a man and goes off to train with fellow recruits. Mulan strengthens a binary comprehension of gender stereotypes that privilege men over women and how difficult

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    The film Mulan was made to combat the stereotypical gender roles in the Chinese culture, however, the movie contains proof of the contrary. China, in Mulan, is shown as a male dominant society in which men and women’s’ actions must comply with their cultural roles. In this setting, a man brings honor to his family by fighting in the war and becoming a high ranked soldier. A woman fulfills her honorable role to the family by marrying a man with status and wealth. Towards the beginning of the movie

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