Posted on 10/10/2012 10:53:56 AM PDT by EveningStar
David Parker in his article, The Rise and Fall of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz as a Parable on Populism looks closer at the many interpretations of the Wizard of Oz and gives us his opinion that sometimes a book is just a book and that interpretations pulled out of thin air are often just as ephemeral. I have always been very interested in what adults think about childrens literature. More often than not they read into the stories political, religious, and even topical themes of their own time or the time in which the story was written.
(Excerpt) Read more at thefreehold.us ...
It was the original chick flick. Two women locked in a battle to the death over a pair of shoes.
I read the book a couple of weeks ago with my 5 year old son.
I thought it was very funny that the wizard made everyone wear emerald colored glasses when in the Emerald City.
There is much political and social commentary.
People in the Theosophy movement didn’t advertise it. It is an unarguable fact that he was a member. If you know the first thing about Theosophy, the symbolism throughout ALL the Oz books is unmistakable.
Your understanding of writing and the creative process is that of an eight year old. Read biographies of Baum and commentaries on the times and get a clue.
To me, the movie is sentimental Depression kitsch. The books are timeless classics.
As annoying as postmodernist literary analysis is (and the last one I heard was someone saying that Kubrick’s “The Shining” was really about colonialism and genocide), I don’t think it’s invalid to say that the reader brings his own beliefs and world view to the text, and gets something different out of it depending on those views. Whether one person’s reading of, say, “Moby Dick” as a metaphor for...whatever...is worth discussing at any length is the bigger question.
Wicked Witch of the West... Nancy Pelosi. Coincidence?
Writers always say that after their books become popular, they don’t want to queer the sales and opportunities for movies
To me it was pre-war kitsch. It opened one week before WWII began.
I loved it as a child until my parents bought the books which were wonderful.
To me it was pre-war kitsch. It opened one week before WWII began.
I loved it as a child until my parents bought the books which were wonderful.
True. I always saw Jaws in terms of Ibsen’s Enemy of the People but more saw it as Moby Dick. But deconstruction is not simply anarchist literary review, it is a tool to construct a marxist, feminist, racial narrative out of literature and history. And it is used to tear down the Western narrative which has allowed the growth of Liberty, social, political and economic, and individual and societal prosperity.
Frank Morgan decided that he wanted a once elegant coat that had "gone to seed" for his role. He went to a second-hand shop and purchased a whole rack of coats, from which Morgan, the wardrobe department and the director chose one they thought had the perfect appearance of shabby gentility.
One day, while he was on set wearing the coat, Morgan turned out one of the pockets and discovered a label indicating that the coat had once belonged to Oz author L. Frank Baum. Mary Mayer, a unit publicist for the film, contacted the tailor and Baum's widow, who both verified that the coat had indeed once belonged to the writer. After filming was completed, the coat was presented to Mrs. Baum.
Weird.
I remember taking an American Literature class and being introduced to a poet named Frank Marshall Davis. His most famous poem they decided to include in the anthology was about a black man who works at a rich, white country club who witnesses what can only be described as a homosexual orgy where these white guys were throwing around money and other tokens of white man's wealth.
I thought it was disgusting and I wondered why anyone would consider that poem and the author worthy of inclusion in an anthology of great poets.
Lo and behold, that disgusting guy is a hero of marxism and personally mentored another disgusting guy named Barack Obama.
While I was in graduate school I took a course in Theory of Games, which is a mathematical discipline dealing with conflict situations. Given the matrix of possible actions by each of the two competitors, and the payoffs for each combination of actions, the theory will tell you what is the best strategy to play.
It occurred to me that if the two players had differing information about the payoffs, each could think he is winning, but both are actually losing. It took me several years to do anything with the idea, but eventually I wrote it into a story and sold it to ANALOG science fiction (spaceships, interstellar war, etc.).
As it happened, the story was published during the Vietnam war. A reviewer insisted that it was an anti-Vietnam story, mirroring the "no-win" war being fought there.
Now, who knows more about what the story was about -- the author or the reviewer?
"I could tell you things about Peter Pan
And the Wizard of Oz, now there's a dirty old man!"
You’re just a mean, bad man and I don’t like you anymore.
So there!
In graduate school I once suggested that we use capitalism as part of critical literary analysis. It did not go over well.
Saaaaaaayyyyyy, you're right!! When you dissect the Wizard of Oz, it's REALLY a code for the Invasion of Europe in WWII by three-legged Armenian goat herds!!! Thanks for clueing me in!!
Literature lasted through the ages because it presented universal truths. But now there is supposed to be no universal truth. You have your truth, I have mine. They're both "right." It's crazy-making. And it's as old as the devil himself.
Before writing the Wizard of Oz (and even contemplating becoming a childrens story author), Baum held many jobs one being the editor of the Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer. In 1890, Baum wrote a series of articles introducing his readers to Theosophy, including his views on Buddha, Mohammed, Confucius and Christ. At that time, he wasnt a member of the Theosophical Society but he was already displaying a deep understanding of its philosophy. Heres an excerpt of his Editors Musings:
Amongst various sects so numerous in America today who find their fundamental basis in occultism, the Theosophist stands pre-eminent both in intelligence and point of numbers. Theosophy is not a religion. Its followers are simply searchers after Truth. The Theosophists, in fact, are the dissatisfied of the world, the dissenters from all creeds. They owe their origin to the wise men of India, and are numerous, not only in the far famed mystic East, but in England, France, Germany and Russia. They admit the existence of a God not necessarily of a personal God. To them God is Nature and Nature is God
But despite this, if Christianity is Truth, as our education has taught us to believe, there can be no menace to it in Theosophy.
-L. Frank Baum, Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer, January 25th 1890
Two years after writing those articles, L. Frank Baum and his wife Maud Gage joined the Theosophical Society in Chicago. The archives of the Theosophical Society in the Pasadena California has recorded the start of their membership on September 4th, 1892. The Wizard of Oz is very appreciated within the Theosophical Society. In 1986, The American Theosophist magazine recognized Baum to be a notable Theosophist whose thoroughly represented the organizations philosophy.
Although readers have not looked at his fairy tales for their Theosophical content, it is significant that Baum became a famous writer of childrens books after he had come into contact with Theosophy. Theosophical ideas permeate his work and provided inspiration for it. Indeed, The Wizard can be regarded as Theosophical allegory, pervaded by Theosophical ideas from beginning to end. The story came to Baum as an inspiration, and he accepted it with a certain awe as a gift from outside, or perhaps from deep within, himself.
-American Theosophist no 74, 1986
Baum believed in reincarnation, in karma, that there was no devil, and “that man on earth was only one step on the ladder that passed through many states of consciousness, through many universes, to a final state of Enlightenment,” according to Michael Patrick Hearn in his book, The Annotated Wizard of Oz (1973). Hearn is also quoted in Children’s Literature Review (CLR), vol. 15, as saying “The author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was...well read in the occult sciences...Paraclesus, the sixteenth century Swiss alchemist and physician, divided all spirits into four categories: Air, sylphs; Water, nymphs or undines; Earth, gnomes; Fire, salamanders. These could be expanded to the ancient idea of the four states of matter — gas, liquid, solid, and energy....A quick glance at Baum’s fairy tales reveals that he wrote about each Paraclesian classification of spirits. his sylphs are the ‘winged fairies’ (Lulea of Queen Zixie of Is; Lurline of The Tin Woodman of Oz); the undines are the mermaids (Aquareine of The Sea Fairies; the water fairies of the first chapter of The Scarecrow of Oz); the gnomes are the Nomes (the Nome king of The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus and Ozma of Oz); and the salamanders are the fairies of energy (the Demon of Electricity of The Master Key; the Lovely Lady of Light of Tik-Tok of Oz). Baum seems to have created a highly sophisticated cosmology by interpreting this theory of spirits of ‘elementals’ in terms of traditional fairies. This is basically a religion of Nature. Modern science itself has its origin in the occult sciences, in the search for the secrets of nature.... It is not by mistake that the Shaggy Man in The Patchwork Girl of Oz refers to Oz as being a fairyland ‘where magic is a science.’ Both science and magic have the same ends.”
In many of Baum’s works, there are revealing references. In The Master Key, a boy summons up the “Demon of Electricity,’ and A Kidnapped Santa Claus refers to a “Demon of Repentance.” The Tin Woodsman of Oz has a giantess skilled in transformations, and in Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz, there is a climb up “Pyramid Mountain.”
Baum was a pacifist, and in Ozma of Oz, Dorothy is shipwrecked, and Princess Ozma (close friend of Glinda, “the greatest of sorceresses”) is threatened by the Nome king, but he is powerless is the face of her faith and love as she states, “No one has the right to destroy any living creatures, however evil they may be, or to hurt them or make them unhappy. I will not fight — even to save my kingdom.”
In the Saturday Pioneer (October 18, 1890), Baum wrote that “the absurd and legendary devil is the enigma of the Church,” and in the Oz books, he said there were both “good” and “bad” demons and witches. (Baum also wrote a play, The Uplift of Lucifer, or Raising Hell in 1915.)
According to the Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. 22, “Baum complained of being grabbed by spirits when in bed asleep,” and his wife, Maud, and his mother-in-law, the radical feminist Matilda Gage, had clairvoyants and seances in their home. Mrs. Gage was also interested in astronomy and palmistry. In 1890, because she felt the mainstream suffragists were too conservative, she founded the Woman’s National Liberal Union dedicated to the separation of church and state.
pp. 61-68, Now Is the Dawning of the New Age piano casters, by Dennis Laurence Cuddy, Ph.D.; published by Hearthstone Publishing Ltd.
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