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Walt Disney's Pocahontas: Telling A Historical Story

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There is a game called telephone, where you gather everyone in a circle and one person is picked to start. The starter thinks of something to say and whispers it to the next individual in the group. That person then proceeds to whisper what he/she said to the next person, and so on. Finally, when it gets to the last individual in the circle, they have to say out loud what they believe the starting person said. The goal is to be as close to the original as possible, but it never is. That’s what happens when it comes to telling a historical story. Year after year something is left out or miss construed. Sometimes people take things out because it is not something they want to acknowledge or remember. You don’t ever know the original unless it is documented by the person who experienced it first-hand. Pocahontas is a prime example of a story that got lost along the way. …show more content…
One of Disney’s many known movie projects is Pocahontas. The animated film was supposed to be based on the life of Pocahontas in a way that children would be able to learn and enjoy at the same time. Instead, Disney portrayed stereotypes and gave an inaccurate account of real-life events. Pocahontas’s story is unclear to historians because there is not much to go off of. Unlike the movie, ‘Pocahontas’ was actually a ten or eleven-year-old named Matoaka and “she was one out of 20 children of chief Powhatan of the Algonquian Indians” (1

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