Review of Situation

Running head: HUMAN NEEDS THEORY 1

 

HUMAN NEEDS THEORY 6

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Human Needs Theory

Name

Institutional Affiliation

 

Human Needs Theory

Review of Situation

The case study presents information about a diabetic patient, Juan Duran, with no idea on how to start insulin for diabetes. He had received the instructions to start on insulin but did not want to ask too many questions to the personnel at the nursing clinic. Jenny O’Conner, a nurse at the hospital, is instructed to assess Mr. Duran’s situation. The nurse is interested in finding out some information about Duran’s life, as well as medical history so that she can provide the necessary guidance on how he should start on insulin.

Nursing Theory Selected

The self-care deficit nursing theory would be most applicable in assessing Duran and making a plan for his care. The theory is also known as the Orem’s Model of Nursing. It was developed in by Dorothea Orem between 1959 and 2001 (Nursing Theory, n.d.). The theory’s primary philosophy is that patients have the desire to care for themselves. Therefore, patients recover holistically and in a fast manner when given the opportunity to take care of themselves. Moreover, this theory covers broad areas in the nursing field, providing general concepts that can be relied upon in nursing.

This nursing theory was chosen because it gives patients an opportunity to take care of themselves by all means that they can. In Duran’s case, he cannot be confined to a hospital for being diabetic and, therefore, needs to take care of himself to prevent his health from deteriorating. What is more is that the theory dictates that there are self-care requisites that a patient should meet. The inability to achieve these essentials creates a self-care deficit, a point at which the nurse provides support modality. The nature of this nursing theory makes it the best fit model in Duran’s case.

Additionally, Duran needs to learn how to take care of his diabetes at home with the help of his wife. The nursing theory allows the nurse, Jenny, in this case, to involve the clinic’s medical team in coming up with a plan that could be used to keep Duran’s Diabetes in check. She could also educate Duran and his wife about Diabetes, and the insulin shots to ensure Duran’s holistic well-being. Moreover, Orem’s Model of Nursing also takes into consideration the patient’s environment, as well as the family and culture. These factors often influence an individual’s health and would have to be considered before coming up with a plan for Duran’s self-care.

Furthermore, this theory is most applicable because of its ability to be applied in different settings, nursing situations, and patient needs. That is, the approach has various concepts and principles that can be used, and can be adaptable depending on the changes in the patient’s condition. Therefore, Duran and Jenny can work together to ensure that the best care is available for Duran’s state. Any changes in Duran’s health could also be taken care by relying on the various principles provided by this model.

Additional Information to Collect

Jenny requires collecting more information about Duran and his family so that she can know how to tailor the self-care plan. Orem’s Model of Nursing suggests that the nurse considers the family of the patient (Nursing Theory, n.d.). In addition to identifying that Duran lives with his wife and that they lost their daughter, Jenny would also want to know the knowledge that the two have on diabetes. Therefore she would ask Duran whether he has been given any additional information about diabetes, the best diet for these patients. Moreover, she would also want to find out the information that Duran has on self-care, such as behaviors that he is expected to avoid to prevent his diabetes from becoming worse.

Furthermore, Jenny would also be concerned with getting some information about Duran’s culture. There are various cultural believes concerning diabetes, as well myths and misconceptions about this disease that are fueled by one’s culture. Knowing Duran’s culture will enable Jenny to know which matters she is supposed to enlighten Duran. Jenny will also want to know whether Duran will be able to get the necessary support from his community and those around him if his wife is not in a position to administer the insulin shots.

Initiating a Plan of care

The self-care deficit nursing theory suggests that the nurse looks at the self-care requisites that the patients should meet on his own (Nursing Theory, n.d,). Therefore, initiating a plan of care would require that Jenny begins by educating Duran and his wife about diabetes. She could inform the two on what diabetes is, its causes, and factors that accelerate its development. In addition, she should also educate Duran on insulin shots and how their use in keeping diabetes in check. The nurse could also educate Duran on the importance of following the directions given concerning insulin to ensure that his health improves.

Additional information could be provided on prevention needs. It entails letting the patient know about some of the behaviors that need to be avoided, which could be harmful to his health. Information concerning the recommended diet should also be made available to the patient. For example, there are foods that diabetic patients are not allowed to consume, while there are other foods that they are supposed to increase their intake. Such information will be very beneficial to Duran, as it will enable him to take care of himself without the assistance of his nurse at home.

Taking into consideration Duran’s stress level arising from the loss of his daughter, Jenny could also incorporate stress coping mechanisms into the program. Therefore, Jenny could suggest that Duran attends counseling sessions, which could help him talk out his pain with a professional. Duran’s wife could also go through the counseling to ensure that she too is not stressed and is in a position to take care of her husband. With lower stress levels, Duran will manage to engage in self-care and receive the necessary support from his wife.

The Use of a Different Model

The use of a different model would require that Jenny asses Duran and plan differently. For example, the Neuman’s nursing theory, which suggests that patient care is from a holistic perspective, could be used (Neuman, n.d.). The theory holds that three levels o prevention must be engaged to ensure that the patient’s health improves. These levels include primary, secondary, and tertiary, which are all incorporated in the same plan and customized based on the needs of each patient.

Therefore, instead of concentrating on the patient’s ability to engage in self-care, the theory concentrates on different interaction variables that affect a patient. This approach focuses mostly on a patent’s stress level and its effect on the patient’s ability to gain knowledge of the disease and its control. Jenny would assess the level of stress that Johnny is undergoing and his ability to learn about diabetes and insulin. The plan would incorporate prevention activities and intervention efforts.

References

Nursing Theory. (n.d.). Dorothea Orem – Nursing Theorist. Retrieved from http://nursing-theory.org/nursing-theorists/Dorothea-E-Orem.php

Neuman. (n.d.). Neuman Systems Model. Retrieved from http://www.neumansystemsmodel.com/news/newspage1.htm#Neuman

Disney’s “Mulan”—the “True” Deconstructed Heroine?

Disney’s “Mulan”—the “True” Deconstructed Heroine? Author(s): Lisa Brocklebank Reviewed work(s): Source: Marvels & Tales, Vol. 14, No. 2 (2000), pp. 268-283 Published by: Wayne State University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41388562 . Accessed: 05/01/2013 23:22

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Lisa Brocklebank

Disney’s Mulan –

the “True” Deconstructed Heroine?

The familiar and traditional fairy tale often seems a repository of culturally approved values and behavior. In this sense, it forms an imaginary world which reflects the same process of defining differences and distinguishing categories by which we construct and apprehend the world around us. These fairy-tale distinctions may extend from good and evil to rich and poor, to earthly and sublime, to male and female. They form motifs and patterns which surface and resurface, weaving their way in and out of tales, traveling from fireside stories to the gossip of women at the loom, to the songs of workers in the field, to the notebook of the collector. This process of delineating differences becomes as familiar as the process of storytelling itself, and its topoi as recognizable. The tale, moreover, often falls within the guidelines of established social morals and mores. It becomes, if not a pedagogical tool to instill cultural values, and often a means of enforcing the status quo, then certainly the narrative voicing of a society’s most pervasive patterns of belief, behavior, and conviction.

Some tales, however, reveal an inherent subversiveness that projects a deeply rooted Utopian vision of change and transformation. For, as part of the genre’s continual engagement with some aspect of the marvelous, amazing, or unexpected, the fairy tale, in its very essence and role, must inevitably transcend expectations. Indeed, it must contain and offer the possibility of a vision which circumvents the conventional knowledge of society: a vision which exists beyond the dichotomous categories shaping our beliefs, which poses a riddle that challenges habitual patterns of thought, and which seeks to somehow redefine notions of reality.

Marvels & Tales: Journal of Fairy-Tale Studies, Vol. 14, No. 2 (2000), pp. 268-83. Copyright © 2000 by Wayne State University Press, Detroit, MI 48201.

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DISNETS MULAN

The Utopian vision of an ideal society created by these alternative and subversive tales often arises out of the imaginative dreamscape of those who dwell at the bottom or on the outskirts of the social order. As primarily oral tales these visions have, for the most part, their origins in the narratives and stories of peasants (Zipes, “Once” 5). They then “express the creative fantasies of the rural and less educated layers of the population” (von Franz 1). The tellers of these tales seek to express through the stories their hopes of change and transformation, and to criticize the reality which prevents such dreams from

taking form. The “outsider” status of the tellers, moreover, yields the clarity of vision which so often comes with one’s removal from the social structure. At times, this wisdom gives voice to a scathing ridicule of society in an attempt to change the premises upon which “reality” operates. Moreover, as Marina Warner remarks, the tellers of the tales were, more often than not, women, for “[f]airy tale offers a case where the very contempt for women opened an opportunity for them to exercise their wit and communicate their ideas” (Warner xix). Tales could therefore become opportunities for women tellers to voice and propagate alternative visions of social reality and cultural codes of conduct – specifically within the arena of gender behavior and plausibly with a revolutionary or feminist agenda.

The first shift in the form and, hence, in the reception of these tales occurred with the shift from the oral to the literary tale. The appropriation of the oral form

by the literary necessarily precipitated an alteration in its structure and function, as the genre shifted from the domain of public storytelling to private reading and from the mouths of the folk to the pens of the ruling classes (Zipes, “Breaking the Disney Spell” 24). This displacement of the oral by the literary culminated in the nineteenth-century sanitization of the fairy tale for children and the birth or revisioning of those “classic” or enduring tales which form an intrinsic

part of Western cultural awareness. These classical fairy tales reinforced the

patriarchal symbolic order – one based on ossified concepts of gender behavior

(Zipes, “Breaking the Disney Spell” 26). Various feminist literary and cultural critics have highlighted the warped

and biased portrayal of women proffered by these literary tales and the detri- mental gender expectations they purvey. Indeed, feminist critics have been instrumental in bringing to attention the pervasive cultural ramifications of these tales, which serve as social mechanisms for inculcating roles and be- havioral patterns (Rowe 326). According to the standards of gender behavior delineated within canonical tales such as “Cinderella,” “Sleeping Beauty,” and “Snow White,” passivity, victimization, feminine charm, and physical beauty are the necessary precursors to marriage and fortune (Lieberman). Within these

stories, therefore, the strident voice of the female storytellers becomes quelled by the enforced silence of the fictional heroines. For, as Ruth B. Bottigheimer

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LISABROCKLEBANK

remarks, the discursive pattern of such tales “produces functionally silent heroines” (53).

If the movement of the tale from oral to literary acted to silence the female voice, then arguably the movement from literature to film further muzzled independent female expression. According to Zipes, the second significant movement in the institutionalization of the fairy-tale genre was the shift to film, for visual images now imposed themselves on the text, creating their own separate textual meaning (“Breaking the Disney Spell” 27). Walt Disney Pro- ductions, with its cultural hegemony on the fairy tale film, has been influential in the articulation of this separate textual meaning. In the production of films such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs , Sleeping Beauty, and Cinderella – which all star passive heroines and female villains – Disney becomes responsible for amplifying the already sexist stereotype of womanhood represented within the verbal texts (Stone 44).

Disney’s status as a producer and distributer of the genre of animated fantasy and children’s film often results in audience members placing its products in a safe niche above cultural reproach or interrogation. Yet, ignoring Disney’s resonant popular impact only strengthens its position as a purveyor of social pedagogy and ideology Disney critics have thus called for the need to “break the spell” and “interrogate the magic.” Such an interrogation entails an intervention in Disney’s formation and representation of identity and gender through oppo- sitional readings (Bell, Haas, and Sells 2). This paper proposes to employ such a methodology in the examination of the recent film Mulan. Firstly, this paper will discuss Mulan in terms of a paradigm shift within the Disney production of gender. Secondly, this paper will look at Mulan in light of the folktale motif of cross-dressing, briefly exploring similar tales of transgendered warriors. Lastly, the paper will progress to a discussion of the film itself, analyzing the performance of gender within the film, evaluating the extent to which Mulan offers a depiction of a deconstructed heroine, and examining the possible effects of the “Disneyfication” of a marginal and subversive form such as the folktale.

With the release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), Walt Disney Productions at once became the canonical interpreter of the fairy-tale genre and an influential purveyor of gendered images. The representation of a victim- ized princess contentedly keeping domestic order in a diminutive house and dreamily singing “someday my prince will come” proved immensely popular as “top ten” lists of movies from newspapers and journals included the film without fail, and often placed it at the very top (Watts 161). The influence of this cinematic representation of femininity reached far beyond the limits of the theater and extended past the confines of a child-centered audience. Indeed, Snow White became not simply an animated figure, but a model which real women strove to emulate. In this vein, women’s clothing served as a means of

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DISNEV S MULAN

vicariously experiencing a fairy-tale world. Women’s Wear Daily, for instance, ran a special twenty-page section that highlighted movie-inspired clothing ranging from underwear and negligees to dresses and accessories (Watts 161).

Cinderella , released in February 1950 as Disney’s first full-length feature film in eight years, followed the resonant success of Snow White , possessing as it did the same motifs of charming heroine and villainous stepmother (Thomas 100). Yet again, Disney producers succeeded in creating a heroine which both reflected and influenced gender roles of the time. Disney studio artists admitted that they wanted Cinderella to be “a universal type, so that any woman looking into a mirror will see something of Cinderella in herself” (Watts 329). While seeking to mirror an American ideal, the fictional character also became a means of ensuring that just such an idealistic vision of femininity was perpetuated and emulated. As with Snow White, Cinderella inspired a line of clothing for young women and, in the early 1950s, Disney officially sanctioned a series of contests in cities around the US to find local “Cinderellas” (Watts 329).

The 1989 release of The Little Mermaid saw Disney Productions’ first commercially successful animated feature since the death of Walt Disney in 1966, and reauthorized Disney’s role as an influential producer of role models fór girls and women (Sells 176). Disney producers displayed their marketing acumen by updating their traditional gender portrayal to include a somewhat more feisty and liberated heroine. Their tactic worked, for the film sold $84 million worth of tickets in the US and Canada – a record for the first release of an animated feature film (Thomas 120). Film critic Roger Ebert lauded Disney for their depiction of “a fully realized female character who thinks and acts

independently, even rebelliously, instead of hanging around passively while the fates decide her destiny.”

Beauty and the Beast (1991) topped The Little Mermaid’s success, becoming the first animated film to generate more than $300 million at the box office worldwide (Grover 258). Linda Woolverton, the scriptwriter for Beauty and the Beast, offers the following explanation for her conception of Belle: “You have to consider what kids are like now in terms of sophistication, you have to make sure that your themes are strong, that people can relate to the characters, that the story isn’t sexist. Belle is a strong, smart, courageous woman. She sacrifices herself for her father. There are great themes of passionate love in the story, almost operatic themes. She’s a Disney heroine who reads books. It excites me. We’ve never seen that before” (Thomas 143). Film reviewers echoed Woolverton’s excitement, heralding Belle as “a feminist” (Berardinelli), “one of the few truly independent minds amongst Disney’s bevy of babes” (“Disney’s Beauty”) , and as “a bookworm with gumption, and a mind of her own” (Hinson) .

While 1995’s Pocahontas grossed $342.6 million worldwide ( Internet Movie Database), its heroine received a mixed reception among critics and viewers.

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LISABROCKLEBANK

Although some praised the representation of a “spunky but idealistic princess” with “impish curiosity and willfullness” (Corliss) , others took issue with Disney’s fanciful transformation of a plain, factual person into a glamorous fictional char- acter, remarking that “the real Pocahontas probably didn’t have Tina Turner’s

posture and Iman’s neck” (Corliss) and that the animated character had a “too- slender Barbie-doll look” (Stack).

Pocahontas – with its supposed portrayal of a “new” sort of heroine yet its obstinate focus on romantic relationships, and with its split depiction and reception of the heroine as “one of the smartest, most spirited Disney heroines ever [ . . . and . . . ] also a babe – a veritable Barbie in buckskin” (Buckland) – illustrates the ambivalence which surrounds the gender portrayals within the more recent, supposedly nontraditional Disney films. For, while both Ariel and Belle deviate from the gender stereotypes of previous fairy-tale films by following their own unconventional desires, they yet conform, in the end, to the comic culmination of marriage. In fact, Ariel’s upward mobility costs her her voice and identity, and Belle sacrifices her dreams of adventure in the outside world to a circumscribed domestic existence. Additionally, descriptions of Ariel as “Barbie-doll cute” (Hinson) and Belle as “Bambi with curves” (Howe) reveal that there still exists a persistent insistence upon portraying/viewing “strong” female characters as “dolls” or sexual playthings. If their more recent film Mulan (1998) is any indication, perhaps the only way for Disney to transcend these ambivalences is to transcend gender itself – in effect, to literally make the heroine a hero. Paradoxically, as Salon reviewer Jenn Shreve indicates, the only way Disney can “get it right” is by portraying a transgendered female:

The strong and feisty female coming of age in the face of adversity has long been a favorite subject of Disney’s animated films. [ . . . ]

Yet in spite of their accomplishments, neither of these charming young heroines rings true. Perhaps it’s because the ultimate reward for their efforts is usually a cardboard cut-out prince. What’s worse, the leading ladies have settled for that. [ . . . ] They’ve got spunk, sure, but it’s only ink-deep. No, Disney’s storytellers and animators have never gotten women right.

That is, until now

Disney draws upon a long folk tradition of transgendering in order to create just such a heroine. The woman in disguise has woven her way through the fairy tale, from its oral inception to its consolidation in written form, to its emergence as a literary genre. Just what makes the transvestite female such a compelling figure in wonder tales? She seems to conflate, in a single character, all the evocative traits of the genre in general: the subversive power of transformation and shape-shifting, the magical ambiguity of metamorphosis,

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DISNEY’S M ULAN

the transgression of boundaries, and the resistance to classification. The cross- dresser is perhaps the most radical form of the transformation motif, for she contravenes not just social rules but “natural” “fact.” The cross-dressed woman, with her illusion of “maleness,” often reveals the arbitrary and cultural – or fictional – nature of gender inscriptions, and the instability of related codes and categories. Within this theme, the cross-dresser disrupts social norms. By rewriting her own role and narrative, the figure exposes the narrativity of social “reality,” both confronting and interrogating its values and regulations.

Hence the cross-dresser, as with the fairy tale which she often inhabits, through her transgressive behavior inverts and undermines the predominant social discourse. The cross-dresser and the fairy tale share the same discursive space, and both position themselves in opposition to the dominant signifying practice. Through the text of the body and the text of the tale, they seek to rewrite official reality through an alternative and unofficial representation, yet, paradoxically, one which seems categorically dependent upon that which it seeks to subvert. For, although both the cross-dresser and unofficial literature may reverse or invert the conventional order, they still subscribe to that order. Indeed, the tales involving cross-dressing often tend to obey the conventional

fairy-tale narrative, either through the comic culmination of marriage or the return to proper roles, in so doing, moving toward a closure which contains or even quells any threateningly subversive representation.

What prompts and instigates the at least temporary dislocation of gender, social, and narrative boundaries? Within tales featuring female cross-dressing, the disguise of the woman seems most often to result from socioeconomic

necessity, the need to prove one’s worth as equal to that of a male, the exigencies of survival, the yearning to escape an undesirable situation or, at times, from a combination of all of the above factors. The temporary release created by this disguise and dislocation, however, seems to inevitably end in the return to

previous roles, and in the subsequent re-imposition of ossified categories and the stifling of any potentially incendiary actions.

Tales of transgendered warriors exemplify this pattern. Rudolf Dekker and Lotte van de Pol, in their study of transvestism in early modern Europe, state that the number of women who dressed as men peaked during periods of war (30). Tales of transgendering reflect and explicate this peak. In most of the tales which feature a cross-dressed woman entering battle,1 the youngest daughter departs for war in the place of an absent son. Her disguise as a soldier affords a liberation from the confines of domestic responsibility, and entrance into the army bestows upon the woman a status and identity otherwise absent as a mere “daughter.” As a soldier the woman finds, along with acceptance into the male community, the opportunity to exercise different skills and the freedom to interact on an equal social level with males. However, the restitution

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LISA BROCKLEBANK

of peace inevitably precurses the restitution of social boundaries. As a result, when the battle ends, there no longer exists the pretense for male dress, and the disguised woman must doff her costume as what was, during the period of crisis, a legitimate means of protecting society becomes a socially threatening form of unruly behavior. The end of the war thus brings the restitution of prior social roles and regulations, and the end of the tale contains its own narrative disruption within conventional parameters.

Hence, although a marginal and countercultural form, these fairy tales still persist in following the dominant cultural patterns, be they narrative, political or gender. Even though they ostensibly protest against the established order, they could then paradoxically serve to protect and strengthen that same order, in effect, serving as safety valves which ultimately uphold the order and hierarchy Is the inversion of sex roles and representation but an outlet to diffuse disruptive and potentially antisocial behavior through a vicarious wish fulfillment which provides for the audience an imagined sexual and social transgression?

Yet, the persistence of the cross-dressed figure, who traverses cultural and historical boundaries, suggests that it does indeed carry some potency and symbolic signification that extends beyond the image in the tale, and that resonantly responds to the continually shifting needs of continually evolving societies. Disney’s 1998 release of Mulan attests to the enduring evocativeness not only of the cross-dresser, but of the fairy-tale form itself. The film harnesses many of the narrative arid ideological currents which flow through the cross- dressed tales, such as the need to rewrite a confining role and articulate a new vision of female heroism, the questioning and flouting of social conventions and, through the deconstruction of gender binarisms, the interrogation of the precepts by which we order and construct reality.

The tale’s plot line follows those stories which depict a girl disguising herself as a soldier in order to take her father’s place in battle. In the opening scene, we learn that China is under attack by the Huns, under the leadership of the evil Shan Yu. In order to supplement the imperial army, the emperor sends out conscription notices to every household, for “a single grain of rice can tip the scale [ . . . ] one man may mean the difference between victory and defeat.” The scene then shifts to a bowl of rice, and to Mulan practicing her “lady-like” lessons in preparation for her encounter with the matchmaker. Through these juxtaposed scenes, the film immediately sets up the conventional binaries of an exclusively male heroism and a conventionally female heroism which the tale will then proceed to question and erode. This binarie mode of conception permeates the tale, from the shaming and training techniques Shang employs on his profligate troops (“Did they send me daughters instead of sons?”; “Mister I’ll make a man out of you”; “Be a man”), to the process of Othering and the working out of abjection within the troops (“I am the King of the Rock and

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DISNEYS M ULAN

there’s nuttin’ you girls can do about it”; “We have to fight [ . . . ] don’t be such a girl”; “I do not squeal like a girl”).

However, these behavioral divisions and categories reveal their own insta- bility and their inability to accurately correspond to the “reality” which they claim to name and represent. In this vein, Mulan fails to fit the role of an exemplary daughter and a traditional heroine. Awkward and clumsy, she makes her dog do her chores for her, spills tea, and fails miserably in her test with the matchmaker. The only heroic role open to females is that of upholding the family honour through the formation of a respectable marriage alliance. Yet, although Mulan fails to perform this role adequately (“You will never bring your family honor”) and to “learn” her “place,” she has no other recourse for

redeeming her heroic potential and family status. Mulan’s inability to meet social expectations reveals the discrepancy be-

tween the individual and her socially allotted role and, in so doing, exposes gender behavior as a socially scripted role and an elaborately sustained perfor- mance which sociocultural codes and regulations compel her to enact. Indeed, the scene which features Mulan’s toilette in preparation for her matchmaker underscores the fabrication and performativity of gender. The painting on of a feminine face/mask and the donning of a decorative costume transform Mulan into “a perfect porcelain doll.” Such a transformation emphasizes the artificial nature of those rituals associated with “womanhood” and points to gender itself as a construction and creation, one which often fails to mirror reality as Mulan realizes when, gazing at her painted image in the river, she wonders: “When will my reflection show who I am inside?”

The realization that she is “not meant to play this part” impels Mulan to

forge her own role and write her own “part.” Her re-creation plays with these motifs of mirroring, reflection, imaging, and perception. She later admits that her decision to go to war on behalf of her father arises not so much out of

daughterly concern as from her own need to form an identity, so that when she “looked in the mirror [she] would see someone worthwhile.” Thus, she

exchanges her haircomb for the conscript, cuts her hair, and fits herself into her father’s armor. All these actions are framed, at the beginning and at the end, by the image of her face reflected in the sword (the traditionally masculine means of carving out identity) – an image in diametric opposition to the “feminine” mask reflected in the river. Only by changing her outer appearance can Mulan reflect her inner identity

She thus takes on the male heroic role and, in so doing, not only achieves her desired liberty, but exposes and undermines the interdependence of gender and role-playing. Mushu, her dragon companion, directs her towards a group of

nose-picking and phlegm-spitting “men” so that she can “learn” how to “act” just like them. Mulan duly mimics this “manly” behavior – “shoulders back, chest

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LISA BROCKLEBANK

high, feet apart, head up and strut” – through her exaggerated performance of what are themselves exaggerated stereotypes (“You know when you get those manly urges and you just want to kill someone, fix things, cook outdoors”), parodying and demystifying gender roles, and shattering the illusion of fixed or sacrosanct behavior patterns. Her parody serves to contest not only gender roles, but also the very notion of a stable identity. For, through her “manly” act, she subversively reveals that actions, rather than representing a pre-existing subject, in fact create that “represented” subject. Moreover, not only does Mulan successfully enact this male role, but her innate abilities enable her to excel in it, and surpass the “real men.” Her cleverness, courage, and strategic skill save the troops from certain annihilation, earning her the titles “King of the Mountain” and “the Bravest Man of Us All.”

However, shortly after her triumph and final acceptance into the male com- munity, the treatment of a war wound precipitates the revelation of Mulan’s iden- tity. With this disclosure, her title transforms from “the Bravest Man of Us All” to “Treacherous Snake” and her heroic bravery to “high treason.” The equation of cross-dressing with treasonous behavior shows how menacing the confusion of gender roles can be to society, with its rupturing of traditional values and dangerous questioning of authoritative reality – be it gender or sociopolitical. The preservation of gender and social stability calls for the eradication of the disruptive source. Yet, instead, the Emperor invites Mulan to sit on the imperial council, thus expressing an openness to change and transformation and the desire to extend the rewriting of roles from the individual sphere to encompass society as a whole. Mulan, however, rejects his offer, returning home instead, where she is shortly joined by Shang. The tale thus ends in the beginning, with Mulan returning to her original role and the implication of future marriage.

Yet Mulan’s ending, although it seems to conform to the recuperative imposition of closure present in similar tales of cross-dressing, in fact opens up new possibilities. The scriptwriters reformulate the ending to eliminate narrative ambiguity so that the return to previous categories brings with it an implicit modification of these categories. When Mulan offers her father Shan Yu’s sword and the Emperor’s medal as a sign of the honor she has brought to her family, he rejects these social symbols, embracing, instead, his daughter. This culminating tableau suggests that Mulan brings the freedom and fulfillment which she experienced in disguise back to her former role, so that although she does return to her position as daughter, the return fails to precipitate the re-imposition of the former false expectations. In effect, Mulan resignifies what constitutes the female gender. Her parents accept her for the person she is, not for the role she must perform, thus allowing Mulan to “be true to her heart”: to establish a permanent continuity between her inner reality and outer state without having to sacrifice her sex or exchange one role for another.

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DISNEYS M ULAN

One of the promotional posters of the film emphasizes this rewriting, or resignification, as the central aspect of the tale. It depicts Mulan’s face bisected by the sword which she holds upright in front of her – one half the warrior Ping, the other half, the daughter Mulan. This iconic representation emphasizes the carving of a new identity which fuses previously mutually exclusive roles – the “hero” and the “heroine” – and illustrates that they can conflate and coexist harmoniously, without sacrificing one aspect to the other. The true deconstructed heroine, Mulan is neither one thing nor the other, but everything at once. Mulan manages to construct a tale which succeeds not only in inverting but also in escaping altogether the scripted gender reality so that the cross-dresser can come out of the closet and enter the mainstream of society, without having to change any of those supposedly “deviant” tendencies which

impelled the donning of a disguise. Yet, at what expense does this new vision arise? It seems more than

coincidental that the cross-dresser becomes a mainstream heroine when the folktale itself becomes “Disneyfied.” Does the heroine then escape one form of

prescribed behavior only to become ensnared in another? Disney bases its film version upon “The Ballad of Mu-lan,” an oral ballad by an anonymous woman

poet which originated during the Northern Dynasty (420-599 ce) (The Ballad

of Mulan). The melodious lyric recounts with a powerful simplicity the story of “Daughter,” who trades her shuttle for a horse so that she can serve in the

army in “Father’s” place (Frankel lines 4, 16). In the ballad, the war lasts twelve

years, at the end of which Mu-lan sees the “Son of Heaven,” who sits in the

“Splendid Hall” (35, 36). Rejecting his offer of a minister’s post, she returns home, takes off her “wartime gown,” puts on her “oldtime clothes” and reveals herself to her comrades, who are “amazed and perplexed” that they traveled twelve years with a woman (52, 56). The ballad concludes with a characteristic riddle, which both plays with and opens up meaning and offers insight into the

larger riddle of the poem:

The he-hare’s feet go hop and skip, The she-hares’ 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? (59-62)

The ballad thus originally occupied the same generic and ideological space as other tales which feature cross-dressed heroines. Composed by a woman to recount an inspirational story which rewrites history both past and present, it threaded its way into the narratives of other women who picked up her voice and echoed her song, weaving their own dreams and worlds out of Mu-lan’s transformation, achieving the visionary sustenance to sing new life into their circumscribed existence. Each telling of the story wove a slightly

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LISA BROCKLEBANK

different pattern as the tale fit itself into the dreamscape played out between each individual teller and audience, responding to the subtle pressure of needs and desires. Maxine Hong Kingston conveys the Utopian role which tales such as “Mu-lan” played in her childhood, allowing her, as they did, to write her own “story” and “role,” both offering her the hope of changing her own reality, and impressing upon her the necessity of doing so:

Night after night my mother would talk-story until we fell asleep. I couldn’t tell where the stories left off and the dreams began, her voice the voice of the heroines in my sleep [ . . . ] After I grew up, 1 heard the chant of Fa Mu Lan, the girl who took her father’s place in battle. Instantly, I remembered that as a child I had followed my mother about the house, the two of us singing about how Fa Mu Lan fought gloriously and returned alive from war to settle in the village. I had forgotten this chant that was once mine, given me by my mother, who may not have known its power to remind. She said I would grow up to be a wife and a slave, but she taught me the song of the warrior woman, Fa Mu Lan. I would have to grow up a warrior woman. (Kingston 19-20)

What happens to this marginal vehicle which offers a subversive means of warring against the status quo when it becomes an instrument of that same society and culture? How does its role and signification change when what served as a way of forming an alternative meaning becomes enlisted in the production of mass meaning – when a marginal form is subsumed under a central purveyor of canonical meaning and an unofficial representation becomes an official representation?

With its latest release, Walt Disney Productions make a genuine attempt to offer a positive portrayal of a female heroine – one that seems, by all counts, successful. A USA Today reviewer called Mulan a “coming-of-age heroine” and warned “all Disney cartoon princesses” to “[r]ead your fortune, cookies, and weep: Your reign is about to be kung-fu kicked across the finish line by a spunky she in he clothing named Mulan” (Wloszcyna). There is a sense of recognition, then, that Mulan instigates a definitive breaking away from past paradigms of female heroines – in this sense, forging a radically new terrain in the conception and depiction of women’s roles, not only in animated fairy tales, but also perhaps in other areas of life as well. Yet, by bringing this forgotten heroine into the limelight, does Disney paradoxically strip her of her potency and resonance? Might not the appropriation of a marginal figure (and form) by mass culture stifle its emancipatory potential? Will not a mainstream movie reflect mainstream values?

The tale’s shift from marginal culture to mass culture seems highly prob- lematic. In essence, the mass media take over the marginal voice of the teller, – –

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DISNEYS MULAN

amplifying its stealthy whisper to titanic volumes, fixing its shifting kaleido- scope into set images, and petrifying its oscillating significance into a singular meaning. Thus, although the film assumes the voice of the storyteller, it fails to reproduce the crucial dynamics of teller-audience interaction such as immedi- acy, mutability, spontaneity, and the potential to create individual meaning. It offers the audience a neatly packaged meaning, which they passively consume.

Disney extends its storyteller role from the film itself to the internet. The Disney Mulan website offers a summary of their film – “a triumph of the heart and spirit” (Disney’s Masterpiece) – then provides the “surfer/audience” the opportunity to hear pedagogical interpretations of the tale. By clicking on “Strength,” “Honor,” “Courage,” or “Good Fortune,” they can receive pithy moral lessons easily applicable to their own lives. Disney/Internet thus usurps the place of Nurse/Mother Goose, instructing her children that “[cjourage is about being brave and selfless when you are faced with a challenging task,” (“Courage”) or that

” [s] trength means more than muscles” (“Strength”) . Clicking

on the “Mushu” icon, moreover, will yield inspirational remarks such as “You’re the man!'” (“Strength”). Absent from this role, however, is the element of interaction – the “surfer” cannot question the interpretive lesson, but can only imbibe it.

One must then ask the question: Although Disney writers break free from the prescriptive depictions of Snow White and Cinderella , may they not be, in essence, simply shifting from one type of prescribed behavior to another? For, although Mulan may offer another type of heroine, it seems to reproduce the same dynamics of conditioning and socialization. In so doing, it then subscribes to the very conditions which the folk/fairy-tale genre sets itself against. A “Mulan

Essay Contest for Youth” publicized on the Internet offers young people the

opportunity to write about the heroine within, however, the boundaries of traditional forms: essays “will be judged on content, writing style and grammar & punctuation” (“Spirit of Mulan”). It would thus seem that Mulan has become a tool of pedagogical socialization. In contrast to the creation of an individual set apart from the conventions of society, the impetus seems to be toward the creation of individuals in unison with society. Although this impetus may not have been a deliberate maneuver on the part of Disney, perhaps it is inherent in the dynamics of mass culture and mass consumption; so that while it does offer the image of an alternative heroine, with its wide-scale dissemination, it

may become just another lesson on “how to behave.” The mass dissemination of a cross-dressed, liberated heroine may create

an illusion of security. A “spunky she” ousting the “cartoon heroines” produces the deceptive sense that things have finally changed. Moreover, instead of

encouraging the audience to shape their own destiny and write their own reality, this corporate maneuver seems to do it for them. We must ask ourselves if it is

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LISABROCKLEBANK

productive or potentially dangerous for young girls (or boys) to buy a Mulan dress-up costume and become themselves warrior-heroes. Furthermore, does this wide-scale dissemination of Mulan accessories actually encourage fantasy role-playing or merely facilitate mass consumption of Disney products? The fact that the “moral lessons” on Disney’s website end with injunctions to buy a video or Cri-kee pet seems to point toward the latter. It would thus seem that the movement of a marginal tale into the realm of mass culture might herald the movement from subversiveness to socialization, from revolt to complacency, from individuality to standardization.

Are we, however, limited to the consumption of meaning offered in brightly packaged, easily accessible Mulan Happy Meals, or is there still room for the production of our own meaning? As the dynamics surrounding the creation and production of the salon tales of seventeenth-century France have demonstrated, it is possible to produce stories within a sociopolitical framework that still succeed in insidiously criticizing that very framework.2 Perhaps, then, the very discrepancy between the social critique and championing of individualism in the tale itself, and the socialization and standardization of the movie’s production will cause the audience to question the dynamics behind the production of meaning and reality. For it is in the breaks, the ruptures, and the narrative interstices within the tales and between the tales and the environment in which they are produced that their significance lies.

Tales of cross-dressing seek to open up meaning and to suggest novel possibilities. They question the seemingly static order of surface appearance by breaking apart fixed structures and presenting a world apart from and in opposition to the world of reality. They open up meaning not only by offering an alternative vision, but also by maintaining a constant flux within the visions themselves. The tales refuse to fit into any pigeonholes because they position themselves against the very system of categorization and labeling which fixes meaning. Both the cross-dresser and the tales themselves eliminate narrative .boundaries, thereby allowing a plural, polyvocal, unfixed view of the world. It is therein that the wonder resides: in the abrogation of any solution, in the destabilization of set patterns and signification, and in the refusal to impose closure. Disney’s Mulan does seem, at first, like the most successful fairy-tale portrayal of a cross-dressed heroine. Yet, by transforming the cross-dresser into an acceptable figure, by quelling narrative play and fixing an apprehensible meaning, and by moving both the figure and the tale itself from the margins into the mainstream, it mitigates its wondrous potential. The tale becomes part of the dominant signifying practice instead of positioning itself in opposition to it. The voice of the Nurse, Granny, or Mother Goose, incorporated under the social aegis, loses its incendiary potential. Paradoxically then, in making the discordant, anomalous voice public and in increasing its volume, it serves

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DISNEY’S M ULAN

only to silence it. It muffles the polyphonic voice, eliminates the riddle, fixes meaning, and imposes closure … or does it? Perhaps the film’s attempt to construct a cohesive representation actually illustrates the impossibility of successfully doing so. As we see in fairy tales themselves, meaning lies in the seeming contradictions, in the dissonant images, and in the realization that there does not necessarily have to be a set meaning – for it is in the shadowy margins and from the void that the world of fairy emerges, a world that retains its evocativeness through its very limitlessness.

Notes

1. Some examples of folktales which feature transgendered female warriors include: “Fanta-Ghiro the Beautiful” (Calvino); “Theodora in the Army” and “The Girl Who Went to War” (Dawkins); “The Girl Who Pretended to Be a Boy” (Lang); and “Guinara the Tartar Warrior” (Riordan).

2. The precieuses first voiced the sociopolitical concerns which the tellers would subsequently translate into their fairy tales. The precieuses were a group of ex- ceptional and insidious women within the Ancien Régime, dedicated to the revolt against dominant culture. Salons were first instituted by the precieuses during the reign of Louis XIII and flourished during the reign of Louis XIV In the rigidly hierarchical society of the Ancien Régime, the salon provided the opportunity to thwart this hierarchy by allowing those at the bottom of the scale to ascend, within this sphere, to influential positions. Thus, as a salonnière, a woman could create a realm over which she presided – one which placed itself in opposition to the court. Significantly, in the mid seventeenth century, salonnières turned to folktales as a means of expressing their dissident views and championing their Utopian desires. Often, the writers of these tales employed the cross-dressed female as a means of inverting and interrogating officially sanctioned representations. For examples of such tales, see: ďAulnoy; de Murat; and LHéritier. For sources on the salon tale in the Ancien Régime, see: Barchilón; Canepa; Gibson; MacLean; Seifert; and Velay-Vallantin.

Works Cited

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The Ballad of Mulan. 28 Nov. 1996. Accessed 12 Mar 1999 <http://is6.pacific.net.hk/ -shung/favorites/Mulan . html/> .

Barchilón, Jacques. Le conte merveilleux français de 1690 à 1790 : Cent ans de féerie et de poésie ignorées de Ibistoire littéraire. Paris: Librairie Honoré Champion, 1975.

Bell, Elizabeth, Lynda Haas, and Laura Sells, eds. From Mouse to Mermaid: The Politics of Film , Gender, and Culture. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1995.

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Berardinelli, James. “Beauty and the Beast (1991).” fames BerardinelWs ReelViews: Film Re- views & Criticism. 1999. Accessed 21 Dec. 1999 <http://movie-reviews.colossus.net/ movies/b/beauty. html> .

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Bottigheimer, Ruth B. Grimms’ Bad Girls and Bold Boys: The Moral and Social Vision of the Tales. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977.

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Dec. 1999 <http://cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/Movies/Pocahantas/index.html>. Calvino, Italo, ed. “Fanta-Ghiro the Beautiful.” Italian Folktales. Trans. George Martin.

New York: Pantheon, 1980. 249-53. Canepa, Nancy L., ed. Out of the Woods: The Origins of the Literary Fairy Tale in Italy and

France. Detroit: Wayne State UP, 1997. Corliss, Richard. “Princess of the Spirit.” Time 19 June 1995. Accessed 21 Dec. 1999

<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/archive/1995/950619/950619. cinema.htmb.

“Courage.” Disney’s Masterpiece Mulan <http://disney.go.com/DisneyVideos/Masterpiece/ shelves/Mulan/courage/courage .html>.

Dawkins, R. M., trans. “The Girl Who Went to War.” Dawkins, Modern 301-11. , ed. and trans. Modern Greek Folktales. New York: Pantheon, 1980. , trans. “Theodora in the Army.” Dawkins, Modern 314-15. Dekker, Rudolf M., and Lotte van de Pol. The Tradition of Transvestism in Early Modern

Europe. New York: St. Martin’s, 1989. “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast.” Cinema City. Vers. 2.0. N.d. Accessed 21 Dec. 1999

<http://www.webspan.net/~avatar/beauty.htm>. Disney’s Masterpiece Mulan. Disney.com 19 Apr. 1999. Accessed 12 Mar. 1999 <http://

disney.go.com/DisneyVideos/Masterpiece/shelves/Mulan/>. Ebert, Roger. “The Little Mermaid.” Chicago Sun Times 17 Nov. 1989. Accessed 21 Dec.

1999 <http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert-reviews/1989/ll/382949.htmb. Frankel, Han H. “Mu-lan.” The Flowering Plum and the Palace Lady : Interpretations of

Chinese Poetry. New Haven: Yale UP, 1976. 68-70. Franz, Marie-Louise von. The Feminine in Fairy Tales. New York: Random House, 1993.

Rpt. of The Problem of the Feminine in Fairy Tales. 1972. Gibson, Wendy. Women in Seventeenth-Century France. New York: St. Martin’s, 1989. Grover, Ron. The Disney Touch: ABC and the Quest for the World’s Greatest Media Empire.

Rev. ed. Chicago: Irwin, 1997. Hinson, Hal. “Beautiful ‘Beast’: Disney’s Fairest Fairy Tale.” Washington Post 22 Nov. 1991 .

Accessed 21 Dec. 1999 <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/ movies/videos/beautyandthebeastghinson_a0a7 1 6 .htm>.

Howe, Desson. “‘Beast’s’ Beauty Only Skin-Deep.” Washington Post 22 Nov. 1991. Accessed 21 Dec. 1999 <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/ movies/videos/beautyandthebeastghowe-a0ae85.htm>.

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York: Knopf, 1976. Lang, Andrew, ed. “The Girl Who Pretended to Be a Boy.” The Violet Fairy Book. 1901.

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ou Recudí de diverses pièces galantes en prose et en vers. Paris, 1696. Lieberman, Marcia К. “Some Day My Prince Will Come: Female Acculturation through

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Muían. Dir. Barry Cook and Tony Bancroft. Walt Disney Pictures, 1998. Murât, Henriette-Julie de. “Starlight.” Trans. Terence Cave. Wonder Tales: Six Stories of

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and Barbara Karasek. 2nd ed. Peterborough, Ont.: Broadview, 1996. 325-45. Seifert, Lewis C. Fairy Tales , Sexuality, and Gender in France, 1690-1 715: Nostalgic Utopias.

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<http://www.heroinesinhistory.com/spirit.html>. Stack, Peter. ” ‘Pocahontas’ – the Musical: Disney’s New Animated Extravaganza Is Long

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Thomas, Bob. Disnefs Art of Animation: From Mickey Mouse to Beauty and the Beast. New York: Hyperion, 1991.

Velay-Vallantin, Catherine. La fille en garçon. Carcassonne: GARAE/Hésiode, 1992. Warner, Marina. From the Beast to the Blonde : On Fairy Tales and Thür Tellers. 1994.

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12 Mar. 1999 <http://www.usatoday.com/life/enter/movies/lfilml70.htm>. Zipes, Jack. “Breaking the Disney Spell.” Bell, Haas, and Sells, From Mouse 21-42. . “Once There Was a Time: An Introduction to the History and Ideology of Folk

and Fairy Tales.” Breaking the Magic Spell : Radical Theories of Folk and Fairy Tales. Austin: U of Texas P, 1979. 1-19.

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  • Article Contents
    • p. 268
    • p. 269
    • p. 270
    • p. 271
    • p. 272
    • p. 273
    • p. 274
    • p. 275
    • p. 276
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  • Issue Table of Contents
    • Marvels & Tales, Vol. 14, No. 2 (2000), pp. 213-343
      • Front Matter
      • Complex Entities in the Universe of Fairy Tales [pp. 219-243]
      • “History’s Bearer”: The Afterlife of “Bluebeard” [pp. 244-267]
      • Disney’s “Mulan”—the “True” Deconstructed Heroine? [pp. 268-283]
      • SCHOLARSHIP IN TRANSLATION
        • A New Debate about “Old Marie”? Critical Observations on the Attempt to Remythologize Grimms’ Fairy Tales from a Sociohistorical Perspective [pp. 287-311]
      • TEXTS &TRANSLATION
        • One More Step [pp. 315-320]
      • Reviews
        • Review: untitled [pp. 321-323]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 323-325]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 325-328]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 329-331]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 331-332]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 332-334]
        • Review: untitled [pp. 334-335]
      • Professional Notices [pp. 337-338]
      • Contributors [pp. 339-340]

The purpose of Susan B. Anthony’s “On Women’s Right to Vote” speech

Instructions: Comment on each of the students below chosen work. Do you agree with his or her analysis of this speech? Why? The ‘why’ is key – please post a rich response to each student in at least 250 words.

 

STUDENT 1: http://www.historyplace.com/speeches/anthony.htm . (Document Reviewed)

The purpose of Susan B. Anthony’s “On Women’s Right to Vote” speech was to convince Congress (and all men of the United States) to rescind the law that denied women the right to vote on the basis that it was unconstitutional and immoral.  Her claim of the speech was that voting should be legalized for women because is a constitutional right provided to all citizens, regardless of sex.

Anthony begins her argument using the Toulmin model by stating a claim and then providing support for that claim.  The primarily utilizes logic appeals (logos) in the early parts of her speech, when she directly quotes the Constitution and logically proves that the phrase “we the people” does not exclude, either explicitly or implicitly, women.  Furthermore, she utilizes reason how illogical it is to write into the Constitution that calls for the consent of the governed when denies a women the right to vote ensures that she can no longer provide consent to be governed.  She cites the Constitutional statement that prohibits the making of any law that denies these basic rights to any citizen or group.  She further supports this argument by utilizing the analogy of the establishment of African American voting rights which were formed on the basis of this same argument.

Near the end, Anthony also utilizes emotional appeals to fully engage the audience.  It was likely effective at making women feel empowered and men feel ashamed or self-conscious of their actions.  “To them this government is not a democracy…It is an odious aristocracy; a hateful oligarchy of sex; the most hateful aristocracy ever established on the face of the globe… (qtd from The History Place)”

Anthony did not make any attempt to see eye-to-eye with her male audience, nor did she attempt to reach a middle ground in any way.  Her point was resolute, and her stance was unwavering. She sought to secure women’s right to vote, and she was unwilling to compromise in any way.  In this way, she did not utilize the Rogerian model of arguing.  It was still incredibly moving, and it is recognized today as one of the more effective speeches in history.

 

 

STUDENT 2: http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ike.htm . (Document Reviewed)

For this week’s forum, I decided to write about, “Eisenhower’s Farewell Address to the Nation”. As I was reading the speech, I became reminiscent of Elie Wiesel’s speech from week 2. What I mean is, the speaker or author in this case creates his ethos before evening stating his purpose or claim.

The purpose was, “America’s leadership and prestige depend, not merely upon our unmatched material progress, riches and military strength, but on how we use our power in the interests of world peace and human betterment” (Eisenhower).

The claim is, “Throughout America’s adventure in free government, such basic purposes have been to keep the peace; to foster progress in human achievement, and to enhance liberty, dignity and integrity among peoples and among nations” (Eisenhower).

Eisenhower uses a couple pathos and logos to support the claim. One such example of a pathos used to manipulate the audience is his description of the communist state, particularly how insidious in method they are. Whereas his logos would be how the speaker feels that the solution could come in the form of a costly action.

Eisenhower mentions the opposite side repeatedly throughout the essay. One such examples would be the need to maintain balance in and among national programs. Which was a response to his comments of unrealistic programs.

Eisenhower uses a combination of the Toulmin and Rogerian essay. This is evident because he states a purpose, claim, provides multiple supports for his claim, and acknowledges the opposite side but does so without belittling the opposite view. He also ends the essay by find neutral grounds that both parties could agree with.

 

 STUDENT 3: http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ike.htm . (Document Reviewed)

For this week six forum, I have chosen the Eisenhower’s Farewell Address to the Nation speech as my focus to answer the questions and discuss the methods of this great American presidential speech.

While I was reading through this speech, I found it quite hard to find his claim and I would have to say that I believe that this is the claim of the speech. “Throughout America’s adventure in free government, such basic purposes have been to keep the peace; to foster progress in human achievement, and to enhance liberty, dignity and integrity among peoples and among nations” (Par. 9).

Through out this entire speech Eisenhower brings up the accomplishments of the American people with a very religious point of view. I believe that this would be a form of the use of pathos, simply because religion brings up a lot of emotion to each and every person in its own way and points of view. “Crises there will continue to be. In meeting them, whether foreign or domestic, great or small, there is a recurring temptation to feel that some spectacular and costly action could become the miraculous solution to all current difficulties” (Par. 13). This part of his speech would bring a lot of emotion especially hearing it over the radio, because of the idea of a spectacular and costly action could be a part of your life and your own decisions.

“After a half century of service of our country, I shall lay down the responsibilities of office as, in traditional and solemn ceremony, the authority of the Presidency is vested in my successor” (Par. 2). This statement is a very well said way of expressing logos, because he has stated the amount of time and his position giving him a great figure of reasoning throughout his speech.

In my opinion, he supports his claim by bringing up multiple forms of crisis that America had faced and given great sacrifices in attempt to create a greater freedom for the people. “vital element in keeping the peace is our military establishment” (Par. 15).

I would have to say that in this speech Eisenhower uses a mixture of both methods, because he does indeed bring in many supports and views, but lacks in my opinion by bringing up argumentized points of view for rebuttal. Much rather for just a point to view and have a knowledge for the future development and avoiding the same situations.

 

STUDENT 4: https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/cdarrowpleaformercy.htm . (Document Reviewed)

For this week in reading I read “Mercy for Leopold and Loeb” by Clarence Darrow.  Out of the three that I read, it was the most interesting to read.  It was a plea for mercy to not use the death penalty on the subjects Leopold and Loeb who were convicted of a crime and were awaiting a sentence.

The purpose of the writing was to try and persuade the judge, and I assume the jury, to think about whether the death penalty was necessary.  The speech used pathos very well.  One such example of Darrow using logos to reach his audience is, “Here it Leopold’s father — and this boy was the pride of his life.”  Assuming there were other fathers in the audience, this would have brought about emotions from the crowd.

I believe that the speech was using a mixture of the Toulmin and Rogerian methods.  The author stayed very neutral and at the same time tried to persuade the audience to agree to his side of the argument.  One example of neutrality is,” I care not, your Honor, whether the march begins at the gallows or when the gates of Joilet close upon them, there is nothing but the night, and that is little for any human being to expect” (Darrow).  Darrow tried to persuade his audience to agree with his ideals by showing both sides of the picture throughout his speech.

 

STUDENT 5: http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ike.htm (Document Reviewed)

The “Persuasive American Speech”  that i picked was President Eisenhower’s  Farewell Address to the Nation. I chose this one cause in my previous English class I wrote an essay on President Eisenhower. It was interesting to learn about all the things he did as president that I did not know about.

The purpose of his speech was to address the nation one final time as President, and to let the American people know his final thoughts after eight years in the white house.  I feel the claim of his speech is that Ideas of American government: peace, progress, liberty, dignity, integrity, must continue as our country changes. The president supports an ethos approach, “You and I – my fellow citizens – need to be strong in our faith that all nations, under God, will reach the goal of peace with justice. May we be ever unswerving in devotion to principle, confident but humble with power, diligent in pursuit of the Nations’ great goals”( Eisenhower).

I believe the type of argumentation that was used in the speech was Rogerian.  This is because common goals are identified and opposing views are described as objectively as possible in an effort to establish common ground and reach an agreement.  “In holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite” (Eisenhower).

Compare and contrast Renoir’s Moulin de la Galette against Toulouse Lautrec’s At the Moulin Rouge.

INSTRUCTIONS: write a one-page double spaced 12 point type paper. Submitting paper to TURNITIN NO PLAGIARIZING. Worth 100 points, so write a well editing and convincing paper.

PROMPTS: Watch at least two of the four videos below (ONLY USE ATTACHED slides shows as reference material!!! I HAVE ATTACHED EVERY SLIDE SHOW WE HAVE USED THROUGH THE SEMESTER)

Choose only ONE of the following topics to write about:

1. Compare and contrast Renoir’s Moulin de la Galette against Toulouse Lautrec’s At the Moulin Rouge. Your paper should have a strong thesis statement. Compare technique, composition, subject matter, and the intent of the artist in each case. State the similarities but also BE SURE TO STATE THE CONTRASTS.

2. Write an in-depth analysis of Manet’s Bar at the Folies Bergère including the technique and intent of the artist, and the subject matter. Concentrate on all the points made in the video, the textbook and the slide show. Compare the still life at the bar with the still life in Renoir’s Moulin de la Galette. Also compare the kind of crowd and the atmosphere in the two paintings. What was Renoir’s intent? What was Manet’s intent? Your paper should have a strong thesis statement.

3. Compare Gustave Caillebotte’s Rainy Day Paris with Renoir’s Moulin de la Galette. Specifically respond to how these paintings address life in Paris in the 1870s. How does the broad boulevard in Caillebotte’s painting apply to the fact that Paris had been renovated? How does the crowd in the Montmartre dance hall Moulin de la Galette compare to the people in Caillebotte’s painting? Why are they both Impressionist painters when Caillebotte’s work is so much more precise in terms of brushstrokes as compared to Renoir’s? Answer these questions in a specific and clear way. Your paper should have a clear thesis statement.

LINKS TO VIDEOS:

REALISM

 

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A the Romantic movement began to lose favor—a new style of art, and literature, REALISM was ushered in beginning around the late 1840s…

GUSTAVE COURBET, The Stone Breakers, 1849. Oil on canvas, 5’ 3” x 8’ 6”. Formerly at Gemäldegalerie, Dresden (destroyed in 1945

Gustave Courbet was one of the leading figures of the Realist movement. He believed that an artist should examine his or her surroundings and paint what they observe. Subjects that were previously thought to be unsuitable were embraced by artists like Courbet. Courbet had written that he wanted: “To be able to translate the customs, ideas, and appearances of my own time as I see them (…)to create a living art.” In this painting of 1849, Courbet examines the life of a menial workers. Stonebreakers were traditionally one of the lowest ranking of the laborers. We see an older and younger man, whose job it is to break stones from morning until night. Courbet emphasizes the earthiness of their profession by using a palette of browns and greys, and by painting the men’s clothing in the same palette as the earth. We see a man perhaps around 70 and a young man perhaps in his late teens both doing the same hard labor and suggesting that there is no upward mobility in their lives, the young man will grow old doing the same work and remain in poverty. It was rare to create unidealized portraits, especially of the working poor. The 1848 revolution made this painting timely, but the conservative French Academy Salon jurors deemed it unacceptable and “socialist”.

 

 

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Courbet described his inspiration for Stone Breakers in a November 1849 letter to Francis and Marie Wey:

 

“I had taken our carriage to go to the Château of Saint-Denis to paint a landscape. Near Maisières I stopped to consider two men breaking stones on the road. One rarely encounters the most complete expression of poverty, so right there on the spot I got an idea for a painting. I made a date to meet them in my studio the following morning, and since then I have painted my picture. …On one side is an old man of seventy, bent over his work, his sledgehammer raised, his skin parched by the sun, his head shaded by a straw hat; his trousers, of coarse material, are completely patched; and in his cracked sabots you can see his bare heels sticking out of socks that were once blue. On the other side is a young man with swarthy skin, his head covered with dusk; his disgusting shirt all in tatters reveals his arms and parts of his back; a leather suspender holds up what is left of his trousers, and his mud-caked leather boots show gaping holes on every side. The old man is kneeling, the young man standing behind him energetically carrying a basket of broken rocks. Alas! In this class, this is how one begins, and that is how one ends.”

 

Cited in Albert Boime, Art in an Age of Civil Struggle 1848-1871 (Chicago, IL and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2007), pp. 158-9.

GUSTAVE COURBET, Burial at Ornans, 1849. Oil on canvas, 10’ 3 1/2” x 22’ 9 1/2”. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

This massive canvas has been regarded by some art historians as Courbet’s masterpiece. It depicts a funeral in the provinces where Courbet was born. These kinds of funerals are depicted in the novels of Balzac and Flaubert, two of the great Realist novelists of the time. Although contemporary critics were harsh, Courbet sought to make this a scene of ordinary people set on a heroic scale, in other words, record this village event as if it was a grand manner history painting. Note the scale of this work, it is almost 23 feet long by 10 feet tall! Some of the models are Courbet’s sisters (which he used as subjects in other paintings) and he also used the faces of friends to make up the funeral attendees. The grave pit itself opens up into the viewers space in the foreground. While many of his critics complained that Courbet used a dark palette and painted with less illusionism than his Romantic predecessors, Courbet’s work sets the stage for modern art by celebrating everyday scenes of contemporary life, and by avoiding any theatrical trappings. A critic who appreciated Courbet’s work, Jules-Francois Champfleury wrote that Burial at Ornans: “represents a small town funeral and yet reproduces the funerals of all small towns.”

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Left: Courbet

Self portrait with a pipe

1849

 

Below: Courbet

Bonjour Mr. Courbet

1854

 

Right: Nadar portrait of Courbet c. 1865

Courbet proudly considered himself to be a rebel. In terms of painting this meant depicting himself and everyone around him in a simple and realistic way, preferring to champion simple people. As mentioned, many critics despised his work but he never wavered. Later in his life, he got involved in yet another French revolution in 1870 which finally toppled the monarchic tradition and resulted in the creation of the French Republic, However, he was exiled to Switzerland in 1871 and died there in 1877.

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JEAN-FRANÇOIS MILLET, The Gleaners, 1857. Oil on canvas, 2’ 9” x 3’ 8”. Musée d’Orsay, Paris

Like Courbet, Jean Francois Millet also sought to paint what he saw around him. He was one a group of French painters who observed country life near the village of Barbizon and for that reason his is considered to be one of the Barbizon school. They specialized in landscapes of the countryside. In this painting we see a group of Gleaners, impoverished women, who go through the harvested fields and take whatever is left over. There was a standing law that allowed people to pick up any fruit, vegetable or grain that was left behind after the harvest. Millet was born into a prosperous farming family so although he never experienced hunger, he was keenly aware of its existence all around him. Although to our eyes this looks like a beautiful painting investing the subjects with great dignity. However, it upset many and was very controversial. Middle-class landowners were resisting the tradition of continuing to allow gleaning rights, and the middle class linked the poor to Marxism. The bourgeoisie were afraid of the advance of socialist ideas and for many classes in France this painting was considered a frightening political message because of its sympathy for the poor.

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HONORÉ DAUMIER, Rue Transnonain, 1834. Lithograph, 1’ x 1’ 5 1/2”. Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia

Although to our eyes the work of Courbet and Millet does not seem subversive, set against the political climate in mid-nineteenth century in France, any homage to the lower classes was seen as provocative by the upper class. Honoré Daumier addressed class and social issues directly. In this lithograph, Daumier, a great printmaker depicts a tragic event of French history. This was published in the August 1834 issue of a monthly French newspaper and shocked the public. It tells the story of a demonstration by the working class which was brutally suppressed by French government soldiers. As this was happening, a sniper housed in a workers apartment building fired outside and shot one of the French civil guardsman. The remaining guards stormed the building and brutally murdered all of the inhabitants of the building including men, women, and children. Daumier depicts the moment after the slaughter. We see a dead man whose body covers his dead child. Other dead bodies litter the small, humble apartment. This was a simple but moving depiction of a miscarriage of justice that is a perfect example of Realist art because it is rough, spontaneous and depicts a contemporary event.

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HONORÉ DAUMIER, Third-Class Carriage, ca. 1862. Oil on canvas, 2’ 1 3/4” x 2’ 11 1/2”. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

This painting by Daumier gives the viewer a glimpse into a third-class train carriage and is carried out like a print but is actually a painting. The riders are clearly working class as seen by their clothing and resigned demeanor cramped into a dark and dirty railway car, probably on their way to work. On the rail system, first and second class passengers had private, closed compartments. This is a comment on 19th century industrialization and workers who those of the upper classes might see as anonymous people. His work both in this scene and in the Rue Transnonain take the place of the camera which was as yet unavailable for spontaneous journalistic reportage.

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ROSA BONHEUR, The Horse Fair, 1853–1855. Oil on canvas, 8’ 1/4” x 16’ 7 1/2”. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

A realist painter, Rosa Bonheur avoided the socially charged political subject matter of Courbet, Millet or Daumier. In fact she is one of a kind for many reasons. She focused on country scenes and painted faithful depictions of animals, including horses, rabbits, cows and sheep. She was unusual for her time and her self-assurance can be attributed to the fact that her father encouraged her educations and sense of freedom, unusual in those days in France when upper class women had little formal education and were placed in arranged marriages at an early age. In order to study animal anatomy, Bonheur visited the slaughterhouses where she studied the anatomy of horses and cattle. She also obtained special permission from the government to wear pants (which was generally forbidden to women) so that she could wander freely in the country and the city to study nature. Her paintings were very popular and were made into prints.. “I was forced to recognize that the clothing of my sex was a constant bother. That is why I decided to solicit the authorization to wear men’s clothing from the prefect of police.” She wore typical female attire when not working but she lived with a female companion most of her life. Although she was actually rather conservative, she is seen today seen as a proto-feminist and it is thought she was a lesbian albeit very closeted. She was famous in her own time and was patronized by Empress Eugenie of France, and Queen Victoria of England, as well as being the first woman to be awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor.

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IDEAS THAT USHERED IN REALISM

 

Realism defined: a return to the rational (in art and literature) and a renewed embrace of Enlightenment ideals

 

Empiricism: the idea that knowledge must be based on observation and positivism

 

Positivism: a philosophical model developed by Auguste Comte who believed that science is the highest achievement of the mind

 

Artists embraced realism as a means to observe life as it is, and to paint without reverting to mythology or history. Realism also became important to writers like George Elliot, Honoré de Balzac and Gustave Flaubert among others

THE NEW MODERNISM

 

ÉDOUARD MANET, Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbe (Luncheon on the Grass), 1863. Oil on canvas, 7’ x 8’ 10”. Musée d’Orsay, Paris

Edouard Manet was as important to 19th c. art as Courbet had been earlier in the century. He continued to paint scenes of contemporary life, but rather than address social issues, his work commented directly upon the history of art itself. This painting, Luncheon on the Grass, was considered shocking for two major reasons. Although at first glance it is a contemporary genre scene, the fact that Manet combined an unclothed woman and two fully dressed men picnicking in a park like setting was shocking because he didn’t use any mythological pretext. The other innovative feature of this work is the shallower, less illusionistic space created by the strong contrasts between light and dark. Manet is credited as the father of modernism because he believed in flattened perspective and acknowledging the flatness of the canvas. When people looked at this painting, they saw the female figure as a member of the demi-monde, that is to say a prostitute. She was Victorine Meurent, who was one of Manet’s favorite models. The men in the painting are probably Manet’s brother Eugene on the right, and his brother in law Ferdinand Leenhof. Manet used this painting as a way to allude to many paintings of the past like Titian’s Pastoral Symphony or Fete Champetre. One angry critic called it a “young man’s practical joke, a shameful, open sore.” The style of the work and the subject matter combined made this work unacceptable to the public of 1863. However, the work of Manet inspired Impressionist painters soon to come.

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Titian/Giorgione, Fête Champêtre, 1510

Manet was addressing art history and thinking about a real, reinterpretation of this subject by Titian/Giorgione.

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Above: Manet Luncheon on the Grass, 1863

 

Right: Giorgioni/Titian Fête Champêtre, 1510

 

Marcantonio Raimondi (after Raphael), engraving 1515

It is also thought that his group of figures was inspired by this print after a painting by Raphael.

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Raphael, The Judgment of Paris, 1512, Private Collection, U.K., 56 x 71 cm

There are many other examples of clothed men and naked females in art history, here an example by Raphael. However, because the subject is mythologically inspired, it raised no concern.

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Claude Monet, Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe, 1865-1866, Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

Luncheon on the Grass has inspired many copies, this one by Manet’s friend Claude Monet who choses to clothe all his figures including his wife, center.

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Picasso, Luncheon on the Grass, 1961

Even Picasso had a version of Luncheon on the Grass in 1951.

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Mickalene Thomas, Le Dejeuner sur l’herbe: Les Trois Femmes Noires, 2010, rhinestones, acrylic and enamel on wood panel, 120” x 288”

As did Mickalene Thomas who interprets this through the eyes of a contemporary African American woman.

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