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Sunday, February 17, 2019

Changing the Stereotypical View of Native Americans in the Movie, Dance

Changing the Stereotypical View of Native Americans in the Movie, Dances With WolvesThe flick Dances With Wolves begins with John Dunbar in the medic tent awaiting his leg to be gelded off because of an injury and the fearfulness of it getting gangrene. He manages to keep it when the doctors prescribe they are too tired to work on an otherwise patient. Dunbar thus decides that he wants to keep his leg when he sees one of the other soldiers hobbling around. afterward leaving the tent, he found that on that point had been no push by either side in the battle they were in, so he obstinate to ride a horse right in front of resistance lines in an attempt to get it started and to die. He rode twice, but neither sequence got shot. When he arrived back at his home line, he was a gunman and was granted the horse he rode and was permitted to go to any mooring he desired. Dunbar had al panaches wanted to go west to see the frontier so he requested the farthest west post. In preparin g to go on the trip, he found that a soldier loss out there is to be an Indian fighter. There was a wagon number one wood who was voluntary to take him out to the post, but he annoyed Dunbar. On the way out, they saw human skulls and demolished wagon, which put a little fear in Dunbar. On arriving, Dunbar found no one there. The wagon driver tried to convince him to go back with him but Dunbar refused saying that that was his post. They then unloaded the wagon and stocked the building with the supplies. Then, as the driver was going back home, he as attacked by some Indians and killed. Dunbar stayed at the post and did some repairs and explored the surrounding area. There was a wolf that came around presently and then to watch which eventually became Dunbars companion. During this time a few Indians visited him. A... ...he immaculate animal leaving no waste. Another is by showing how the white men treated each other and the Native Americans. How the whites would be deplorab le to the Native Americans adept because that was who they were. The Sioux however, were not violent or cruel to Dunbar just because he was white, but were cautious and fearful of him at first. Once they got to make love him, they were more open to him willing to accept him as their friend. This movie seemed to depart allegiance from the white European Americans to the Native Americans rather successfully and effectively changing the stereotypical view of Native Americans by showing which host was actually the cruelest. It demonstrated it by showing which group was the invaders and which group was the invaded. It excessively demonstrated this by showing how each group lived and interacted with each other and those around them.

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