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capitalism. These messages reflect the place and time in which the film was made: the songs are typical 1990s soft rock music, some of the jokes refer to current events, and the storyline evokes concepts popularized in the 1990s by New Age spirituality. Using ideas and concepts that were familiar and reassuring to many Americans probably helped strengthen the film’s popularity.

      According to our cultural studies model, the cultural artifact The Lion King is the text under consideration, its producer is the Walt Disney Company (the animators, performers, and other employees involved in making the film), and the readers are all the people who have seen the film since its release in 1994. The Disney filmmakers encoded meaning into the cartoon, and every viewer, whether preschooler or senior citizen, works to understand the text by decoding it. The film was arguably as popular as it was because it playfully and joyfully encoded dominant hegemonic ideas about white patriarchal capitalism into its form and content: the film’s story is a coming‐of‐age tale in which Simba, a young male lion, learns that his proper place in the world is to be the leader of those around him. Readers who enjoyed the film were probably performing dominant readings of the text, as they cheered on the young lion’s rise to the throne, defeating his adversaries amid song and dance and colorful spectacle.

Still frame from the animated film The Lion King displaying young Simba and Uncle Scar smiling at each other.

      Yet, while the film was a huge box office hit, there emerged a small but vocal opposition to The Lion King, criticizing it on a number of levels. These critics of the film performed oppositional and/or negotiated readings. For example, some readers were annoyed that the film focused on patriarchal privilege by dramatizing how a son inherits the right to rule over the land from his father. The film literally “nature”‐alizes this ideology by making it seem as if this is how real‐life animals behave, when in fact female lions play dominant roles in the social structure of actual prides, a detail the film minimizes (and which, by extension, minimizes the importance of females in human society). The female lions in the film are minor “love interest” characters, and females of other species are almost non‐existent. One might also note that the film’s very title is suggestive of male authority and supremacy – lions and kings are longstanding symbols of patriarchy.

Top left: Photo of Whoopi Goldberg. Top right: Cheech Marin. Bottom: Still frame from the animated film The Lion King displaying Shenzi and Banzai.

      Villainy in the film is also linked to stereotypical traits of male homosexuality. The villainous lion Scar is voiced by Jeremy Irons with a British lisp and an arch cynicism; the Disney animators drew him as weak, limp‐wristed, and with a feminine swish in his walk. Other characters refer to him as “weird,” and, in his attempt to usurp the throne for himself, he disdains the concept of the heterosexual family. Scar’s murder of Simba’s father and his attempt to depose the “rightful” heir to the throne posit him as a threat to the “natural order” itself (a fact made literal when Scar’s rule results in the environmental devastation of the savanna). It is only with the restoration of Simba to the throne that the land comes back to life, in a dissolve that makes the change seem miraculously immediate. Perhaps most disturbingly, the film connects Scar’s implied homosexuality with one of the twentieth century’s most heinous evils: his musical solo, complete with goose‐stepping minions, is suggestive of a Nazi rally.

Photo of Beyoncé, with a logo of the animated film The Lion King at her background.

      The second Lion King film, released twenty‐five years later reveals interesting things about its era, just as the first film did; for example, its ecological message seems even stronger in the current era of climate change awareness. The new Lion King also demonstrates the active hegemonic negotiation of some of the first film’s ideological messages. It tries to address some of the criticisms of the first film vis‐à‐vis race by hiring far more African American actors and singers to voice the lead roles (including Donald Glover and Beyoncé). The familiar score is still by Elton John and Tim Rice, but Disney brought in Pharrell Williams to produce some of it. The female characters do more in this remake. Beyoncé’s Nala has a new song all to herself. Simba’s mother Sarabi (Alfre Woodard) chases away hyenas (off screen) near the start of the film, and she and the female members of the pride fight ferociously to drive off the hyenas at the end. The leader of the hyenas (Shenzi) in the new version is also a much stronger female character. Perhaps the most interesting thing about the new film is the way its photo‐realistic CGI animation (what some people mistakenly refer to as “live action”) tones down the stereotypes present in the first version. Scar (Chiweitel Ejiofor) no longer has swishy gay connotations; in fact, he wants to marry Simba’s mother. There is no longer a suggestion of a Nazi rally in his big number, “Be Prepared.” Similarly, other characters who also had vaguely stereotypical behaviors in the first film, are herein treated with more

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