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Hayao Miyazaki Essay

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Introduction
Within a traditional patriarchal society women are normally valued far less than that of a man. They are usually subjugated and oppressed in various ways both directly and indirectly within their given society and culture. The country of Japan is no different with its long history dating back centuries of female subjugation. However, recent generations of both men and women have been working to try and change that and director/producer/writer Hayao Miyazaki is one of these people. Within this paper it will be argued that Hayao Miyazaki is a cultural feminist and that he uses several of his animated films to de-popularize the cultural acceptance of oppressing and subjugating women, while simultaneously promoting new cultural views and the independence of Japanese women. Miyazaki has used such films as a dog of …show more content…
Keiko McDonald states that "unity with nature, for instance, has long been considered some portion of the Japanese national character" and that "by 1988, folks had motivation to be worried that their youngsters were putting some distance between nature. Urban sprawl was simply to blame."
In the wake of losing her forces, Kiki likewise moves out of the city, which is about without foliage, to live for a day in the timberland with Ursula, a companion she made amid one of her conveyances. It is in nature that Kiki can recuperate and 'get herself'. It obviously bodes well that Kiki's unique home is likewise in the wide open, near nature. The exhortation that Ursula gives Kiki is to "Take long strolls, take a gander at the view, rest off at twelve." when she can't fly are all near nature also.
Ultimately, another way that Miyazaki evaluates innovation through Kiki's is through the depiction of innovation and its correlation to the old routes as innovation is a basic piece of

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