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David A. PriceA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Early on in Love and Hate in Jamestown, David A. Price brings up Pocahontas, the Disney adaptation of the historical figure’s story: “The imaginative 1995 Walt Disney Co. movie, for example, endowed Pocahontas with a Barbie-dill figure, dressed her in a deerskin from Victoria’s Secret, and made her John Smith’s love interest” (4). Price goes to great lengths to puncture these well-trodden myths, while seeking to establish a few new myths of his own.
Pocahontas was 10 years old when she and a captive John Smith met. In Smith’s retelling of the event, Pocahontas’s plea for his life was not that of a love-struck woman, but a curious and precocious girl. Nevertheless, Smith’s enemies speculated that the pair had a sexual relationship at some point in the four years they knew each other, which might have fueled future romantic retellings (which added a few years to Pocahontas’s life and subtracted a few from Smith’s). Though Price suggests that Pocahontas might have harbored an unrequited crush on Smith, he disproves their dynamic being a Disneyfied tale of star-crossed love.
Journalists who retell history often look for an angle of interest to readers, inventing new myths and often calling them “creative theses.
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