My Name is Not Easy: Part II

582 Words2 Pages

Native American and settler have always been fighting over land, and the movie clip, Pocahontas explains it in a different way. They were fighting because the Native Americans captured John Smith from the settlers. This fight was stopped because Pocahontas jumped in front of the potential murder of John Smith. She did this because she loved him and also she did not want anyone to fight, she told her father about what he caused by capturing him from the settlers. Mike Gabriel inaccurately portrayed the conflict between the settlers and the Native Americans because they never fought and it was stopped by love between a Pocahontas, a Native American and John Smith, a European, Europeans and Native Americans never liked each other. Mike Gabriel portrays the source of conflict as a love story between Pocahontas and John smith and those two sides never liked each other they were always fighting, they mainly fought over land and those battles were always bloody. An example of the love in the film clip is when the father of Pocahontas was about to hit John Smith with his stick and Pocahontas jumped on John Smith to block from the blow of the stick (Gabriel, 1995). Mike immediately cut to Pocahontas's reaction shot so the audience could see her reaction. This humanized her because her reaction was very sad and mad at the same time, those feelings are normal for a human to have. These elements contribute to the inaccurate portrayal of Mike Gabriel's film because in the real world the Native Americans would have killed him because love wouldn't have stopped anything because they had complete hatred for each other. The source of conflict between Native Americans and the European settlers was land, they always fought over land, they... ... middle of paper ... ...http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/eighteen/ekeyinfo/natcult.htm>. "Mohawk Tribe." Access Genealogy RSS. Accessgenealogy.org, 8 May 2010. Web. 13 Oct. 2013. . Yeld, Todd A., MS. "Mohawk Indian Fact Sheet." Facts for Kids: Mohawk Indians (Mohawks). Mohawk Tribe, 3 Mar. 2010. Web. 13 Oct. 2013. . Summer, Julie M. "Mohawk | Cultural Survival." Mohawk | Cultural Survival. An Action Guide for Cultural Survival, 18 Sept. 2009. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. . Ryan, April Y. "Mohawk Indian Tribe Facts." MOHAWK INDIAN TRIBE FACTS. Mohawk Tribe Facts, 16 May 2011. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. .

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