The jungle "Jungle" depicts the low level character of the industry as a naked struggle scene for survival. Workers are not only forced to compete against each other, but even if they collapse it is difficult to overthrow hunger from their doors or overhead. Due to weak union and cheap labor, there is social Darwin's "fittest survival". The real story will center around the fusion of Jurgis ยท Rudokis and his family, Lithuanian immigrants who moved to Chicago's livestock farm, and the final collapse, hoping to live a better life.
Monkeys posted on The Jungle Book of Rudyard Kipling are very unique characters. They are regarded as wanderers and lawless elements by other animals in the jungle, or those claiming to be jungle people. The most prominent chapter in their "Kaa Hunt" shows their lawlessness, immovable, civilized lifestyle. The image itself does not emit racial discrimination at all. However, Disney's adoption of a jungle book has these perspectives of monkeys, while at the same time giving them strong attributes that are often associated with African Americans.
In this case, the jungle (n.b: all jungles are forest, but not all forests are jungle) represents the spirit of Emperor Jones who is his protagonist. Jones escaped from prison and was an African-American who fled to the recessed island of the Caribbean, where he took advantage of the ignorance of the local population to honor his emperor. In the first scene, Jones noticed that local people caught him, and he ran to the jungle. When he tried to find his way, a lascivious landscape became a literal expression of the mind that felt his pain and slowly made him crazy.
Sheena Jungle Queen first appeared as a white ruler of a black African tribe in 1938, and he was most comfortable with sinful fur. With the success of the character, many imitators appeared, "Immediately the jungle filled with luxurious white women," Mike Madrid wrote in "Super Girl". In the 1930s and 1940s, these super sex male readers were hit hard. Their similarity enters the battle even in the airplane. "A few days before playboy and lofts appeared, cartoon books provided a way for girls to see it," comic history historian Ron Goulart wrote.