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Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Mulan

Hayden Ikerd Mr. Wheeler AP Literature 12 April, 2013 doubting Thomas advances Themes Traced in Mulan In his book How to Read Literature Like a Professor, Thomas Foster explains numerous reoccurring themes in literature, and tests how to recognize them and in some instances draws certain(p) works where they occur. By reading this guide to literature, one may supercharge a deeper understanding of the work itself and of the authors intent in writing it. However, Fosters methods can also be use to films.A film that contains many of the various themes, models, symbolism, and devices discussed in his book is Walt Disneys Mulan. Mulan is a source type with which people be well-known(prenominal). Foster discusses this process of acquaintance in the chapter Now Where Have I Seen Her Before? In his book, he asserts that no work is wholly original. The in all idea of a distaff Chinese heroine was non originally conceived by Disney. The character of Mulan can be traced back to The Ballad of Hua Mulan, written some while in the eleventh century.Still, most people may not be so familiar with this relatively dated ballad. Some people may associate the character of Mulan with that of Scout from To Kill a Mockingbird. Both Mulan and Scout are tomboys by nature, acting in offices more suited to boys. Also, they both do things they do for the approval of their respective catch figures. Mulan is notably the heroine of her story, saving the Chinese empire from the attacking Huns. The heroine model can also be seen in characters such as Antigone and Hester Prynne. Food plays some role in all(prenominal) work- namely the act of consuming it.Mulan is no exception. Foster talks astir(predicate) this in the chapter Nice To Eat With You. Towards the beginning of the movie, Mulan along with several other(a)(a) young maidens go to visit the match flummoxr, who is in charge of determine each(prenominal) girls eligibility as a wife. This process by which she judges the m is by leaveaking in a cup of tea with each one. Mulans interview as it were went over horribly. This is to express the fact that Mulan has a measure of difficulty coming into womanhood, and the whole idea of being refined does not come to her naturally.The second meal that plays a big part in the film is the one that takes place in the barracks. Mulan just met her fri closing soldiers, and the next thing to occur is a meal with them. Trying to establish herself as a man, she accidently picks a cope with one, lead-in to a riot, and sieve being spilled all over the camp. After this, they all held her in contempt. Mulans start meal with her comrades shows that she has just as hard a time fitting in with these men as she did with the women. Mulans two meals show the difficulty she has trying to find her place.The role of men and women play an chief(prenominal) role in this movie. Foster touches this phenomenon in the chapter Its All Political. The rudimentary message of Mul an is that of gender equality. As a woman, Mulan is looked down upon, and is not allowed to fight in the war against the Huns in the first place. To fight is to disgrace her whole family. This offense was so dire, that when she was discovered to be a woman on the battlefield, she was sentenced to death. She is also portrayed as being weaker and less capable than the other soldiers.However, she learns to keep up, and eventually excels in combat training and proves to be an valuable asset to the Chinese army. In the end, Mulan portrays women as strong, and in the battle could not have been won without femininity. Towards the end, the Huns are ultimately overcome by the staminate soldiers dressing as women, who seduce them, then defeat them. In the end of the film, virtually all of China bows to Mulan in respect, showing that she is held in equal esteem as even the emperor, who is male (he also bows, of course).Another primal broker in Mulan that Foster blots out is that of rain, which he mentions in his chapter entitled, Its more Than Just Rain or Snow. Foster would have one to see that often times when a character goes through rain, snow, or something of the sort, that he or she has undergone a figurative baptism. After Mulan has failed in her encounter with the matchmaker, she goes syndicate and begins singing the marvelous, gripping song called Reflection. She asks, When will my museion show who I am inside? She realizes that her fair appearance does not reflect her feelings. Singing this song, she washes away her makeup, and gives up on becoming the perfect girlfriend and bride it is a baptism. Maybe it would be key to mention that during this song, Mulan sings in a downpour of rain. Just like Foster describes in his book, Mulan is baptized in the rain. Disney movies are not notorious for their violent nature. So, when something violent occurs in a Disney movie, or an individual (or animal in many cases) dies, it must declare some kind of import ance.In the chapter of his book More Than Its Gonna Hurt You, Fosters says that in that respect is usually more to violence than just violence. When Mulan is struck by the steel of Shan Yu, many more things happen to her than a fatal wound. She almost meets her demise, and for the first time, the reality of war sets in. Mulan realizes that she is not invincible and grasps the perils of war for the first time. When she receives medical examination attention for her wound, she is discovered to be a woman. All she has worked for up until this rouse is now for naught, as she is expelled from the army and her family name is disgraced.Another instance where violence plays an important role is when Li Shangs father is discovered to be dead. Li Shangs father was the head general of the Chinese army he was held in high esteem by everyone, especially his son. Li Shang aspired to be the general his father was. Shangs fathers plan was to make an assault on the Hun army, and meet up with Sha ng after they had obtained victory, which they thought was inevitable. When Shang reaches the point at which he was to intersect with his father, he found him gone.Shangs fathers death signals the time for Shang to take up the burden of leading the Chinese army and the time to become a man. The only way for China to be victorious was for Shang to surpass his father and to do what he could not defeat the Huns. Without this loss, Shang would have never grown and would have never become the general that he was. One can see that Fosters themes are very prevalent in the story of Mulan and are echoed in movies and books alike. Mulan is a real masterpiece to include so many elements of good literature.

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