The name Bambi has become a part of our dialect and is often used as an equivalent word for "deer". Examples flourish. “Look,” a parent will say to their child when they spot a deer, “there's Bambi!” The negligible "Disney" news sparked laughter or anger. The laughter arose not from enthusiasm for the fun in Disney films, but rather from a rejection of the idea that the "Place of the Mouse," that kingdom of amusement created to reinforce middle-class desires for suburban Americans, deserved any attention . The shock emerged from postmodern scholars who saw the Disney standard as speaking to and reinforcing the supremacist, sexist, and classist values that gave ideological underpinning to the Cold War and the conservationist revolution of the late 20th century. In Bambi, Walt Disney uses his well-known credibility to illustrate to children what nature is really like in a "playful" way. Disney reconstructed nature to obey the Disney formula without any acknowledgment of the original text. Film has played and continues to play a key role in shaping the American mentality and understanding of deer and life in the forest. It's difficult to recognize a film, story, or character that has had a more notable impact on our view of natural life than Walt Disney's 1942 legend of life-enlivened peculiarity, Bambi. He became perhaps the best ever and the explanation continues in the famous American anti-chasing society. Examining this artistic proclamation will reveal some of the thinking behind the current verbal confrontation between people who help the game hunt and people who seek its end. The film was centered around Bambi: A L...... middle of paper...... Disney Animation. (Undetermined)." Journal Of The Fantastic In The Arts 20.3 (2009): 431-449. OmniFile Full Text Mega (H.W. Wilson). Web. 12 July 2014.3. Jackson, Kathy Merlock. "Diversity In Disney Films: Critical Essays On Race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and disability." Journal Of American Culture 37.1 (2014): 82-84. Literary Reference Center. Web. July 9, 2014.4. Lutts, Ralph H. "The Trouble with Bambi: Walt Disney's Bambi and the American Vision of Nature." Forest & Conservation History 1992: 160. JSTOR Journals. Web. 13 July 2014.5. Payne, David. "Bambi." From Mouse to Mermaid. Np: Indiana UP, 2008. 137-47. Print. 6. Riffel, Casey. “Dissection of Bambi: Multiplanar Photography, the Cel Technique, and the Flowering of Complete Animation.” 2014.
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