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Is the 'Cat in the Hat' subversive?
National Review ^ | 11/21/03 | John Miller

Posted on 11/21/2003 10:07:17 AM PST by KantianBurke

Hey moms and dads: Bet you don't know what Dr. Seuss really thought about his most famous book, The Cat in the Hat — the basis for this weekend's big movie opening. "I'm subversive as hell," Seuss once said. "The Cat in the Hat is a revolt against authority. ... It's revolutionary in that it goes as far as Kerensky, and then stops. It doesn't go quite as far as Lenin."

Russian-history refresher: Alexander Kerensky was an ineffective revolutionary dictator who preceded Lenin. He wasn't a Commie, but he was a man of the far Left — and not exactly a champion of freedom.

Happily, America's most celebrated children's author was exaggerating. The only thing that's even arguably "subversive" about The Cat in the Hat appears on its final two pages, following the raucous performance of the book's title character, who has just cleaned up an extravagant mess and taken his leave.

Then our mother came in And she said to us two, "Did you have any fun? Tell me. What did you do?"

And Sally and I did not know What to say. Should we tell her The things that went on there that day?

Perhaps keeping parents in the dark really is "a revolt against authority," as Seuss claims. It probably depends on what children are hiding. I've always chosen to read those lines — dozens of times to my own kids, by the way — as suggesting a child doesn't need to share every detail of his imagination with grown-ups. I'm perfectly comfortable with that, and any reasonable parent would be.

Yet Dr. Seuss — the pen name of Theodore Seuss Geisel, a non-doctor who died in 1991 — had politics in his bones. He came from a family of Republicans, but turned into an FDR Democrat in the 1930s and never looked back. He infused his books with liberal messages on everything from environmentalism to arms control, especially during the last quarter century of his life — though one of his lesser-known books is also deeply conservative and deserving of a revival.

Seuss's first public foray into politics came as a cartoonist for PM, a left-wing daily newspaper in New York, during the Second World War. He savaged all the right people: Hitler, Mussolini, and Hirohito. His caricatures of Hirohito — slit-eyed and buck-toothed — probably would be called racist today by the grievance industry; they are certainly forceful. More than 200 of his cartoons from this era were published several years ago in a collection called Dr. Seuss Goes to War. All of them are recognizably Seussian — the "art" in his children's books are really just zany cartoons — and many of them have a kind of relevance today. My favorite ran a few months before Pearl Harbor. A bright-eyed nincompoop labeled "The Appeaser" stands on a rock holding four lollypops. Sea monsters wearing swastika tattoos surround him. "Remember," says the man with a dumb smile, "One More Lollypop, and Then You All Go Home!" The picture is rooted in its time, but remains pertinent today because the problem of appeasement is ever with us.

Seuss held a special animus for the America First crowd of antiwar isolationists, and especially for Charles Lindbergh. He once drew a "Lindbergh Quarter" — it's an ostrich jabbing its head in the sand. He also wrote a bit of verse, which was not published but appears in a 1995 biography, Dr. Seuss and Mr. Geisel, by Judith and Neil Morgan:

The Lone Eagle had flown The Atlantic alone With fortitude and a ham sandwich. Great courage that took. But he shivered and shook At the sound of the gruff German landgwich. If this is liberalism, it's a liberalism many of us modern-day conservatives can embrace. The same goes for a few of Seuss's better-known children's books. Yertle the Turtle (1958) is an anti-authoritarian parable. Its final lines apply as much to Saddam Hussein as they once did to the European fascists: And today the great Yertle, that Marvelous he, Is King of the Mud. That is all he can see. And the turtles, of course ... all turtles are free As turtles and, maybe, all creatures should be. Another book, The Sneetches and Other Stories (1961), contains four tales. Each one is a plea for racial tolerance, continuing a theme Seuss explored during the war with cartoons urging full use of "colored labor" and railing against anti-Semitism. The stories are also amusing, with their meaning embedded inside a delightfully breezy anapestic tetrameter verse (two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed one, with four beats to the line) that Seuss employed to such wonderful effect throughout his career.

But that is not all. Oh no, that is not all (as the Cat in the Hat might say).

Over time, Seuss's stories became more strident. One of his most famous books, The Lorax (1971), remains a favorite of liberal environmentalists. In the tale, the Lorax, who "speaks for the trees," delivers a stern lecture to the Once-ler, a greedy industrialist:

Your machinery chugs on, day and night without stop making Gluppity-Glupp. Also Schloppity-Schlopp. And what do you do with this leftover goo? I'll show you. You dirty old Once-ler man you! You're glumping the pond where the Humming-fish hummed! No more can they hum, for their gills are all gummed. And so on. Now, I happen to love these lines — "Schloppity-Schlopp" is a bit of doggerel genius. At bottom, however, the book is a not-so-subtle attack on capitalism. (Go here to learn from Seuss's publisher how you can "Celebrate Earth Day with the Lorax.")

The next year, Seuss published Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now! Like The Cat in the Hat, it's an early-reader book meant for kids who are just getting started:

The time has come. The time is now. Just go. Go. GO! I don't care how. ... Marvin K. Mooney, I don't care how. Marvin K. Mooney, will you please GO NOW! Here's how the Morgans describe the book's political legacy in their biography: "In the spring of 1974, as the Watergate scandal neared its climax, Ted met the satirist Art Buchwald at the San Diego Zoo, and they became mutually admiring friends." Soon after, Buchwald dared Seuss to write a political book. Eager to comply, Seuss "grabbed a copy of Marvin K. Mooney and, with a few strokes of a pen, deleted each mention of that name and substituted the name of the president." On July 30, Buchwald's syndicated column was based on Seuss's revisions: "Richard M. Nixon, will you please go now!" Nine days later, Nixon really did go — he resigned — and Seuss was delighted. "We should have collaborated sooner," he wrote to Buchwald.

His most political book of all, however, was yet to come. Again, let's let the Morgans set the scene: "[Seuss] was brooding over the mounting cold war with the Soviet Union and believed that under Ronald Reagan the nuclear arms race was beyond control. Over dinner at La Valencia, he wondered out loud how a democratic government could impose 'such deadly stupidity' on people like him who were so opposed to nuclear proliferation." Then he wrote The Butter Battle Book (1984), which his publicists earnestly declared to be "probably the most important book Dr. Seuss has ever created." Seuss himself called it "the best book I've ever written."

The story describes a conflict between the blue-suited Yooks, who prefer to eat their bread with the "butter side up," and orange-suited Zooks, who eat their bread with the "butter side down." The Yooks and Zooks then embark on a perilous arms race. They build ever more menacing weapons, from the Triple-Sling Jigger to the Eight-Nozzled, Elephant-Toted Boom-Blitz, and finally the Bitsy Big-Boy Boomeroo, which is basically a pea-sized weapon of mass destruction. At the ambiguous conclusion, which recalls "The Lady or the Tiger," both the Yooks and Zooks have the boomeroo and look ready to use it.

All of Seuss's other books, including The Lorax, end on a hopeful note. The Butter Battle Book, alone, does not. It is also a perfect emblem of the moral equivalence that neutered so many liberals during the Cold War: It assumes that the half-century conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union was based on nothing more meaningful than a dispute over how people prefer to butter their bread — as if Communism weren't a threat to liberty, but an eating preference.

(Seuss did meet Reagan once, when he and his wife were guests at a state dinner. The story, as related by the Morgans, is wonderful because it is vintage Reagan: "[Seuss] was recalling with the president and television anchorman Tom Brokaw how he had rejected Lieutenant Ronald Reagan forty years earlier as narrator for the wartime film Your Job in Germany. Reagan had not forgotten. 'But you were right,' the president said with an engaging smile. 'John Beal did have a better voice.'")

So what are conservatives to do with Seuss? I say read him, because most of his books are incredible fun — but also choose wisely. My favorite Seuss book is one that many people don't know about: I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew (1965). Seuss may not have realized it, but the theme of Solla Sollew is powerfully conservative.

Unfortunately, it was not Seuss's most commercially successful book — sales were disappointing, even though it was written and issued during his heyday. The Morgan's describe the book this way: "a somber morality tale, a Seussian Pilgrim's Progress with the message that one can't run away from trouble." Yet it's far deeper than that. In truth, Solla Sollew is a warning against what Eric Voegelin called immanentizing the eschaton. Put in plain English: Don't seek heaven on earth.

The unnamed narrator — one of Seuss's typical cat-like creatures — joins an odd fellow on his way to the City of Solla Sollew, which is

On the banks of the beautiful River Wah-Hoo, Where they never have troubles! At least, very few. It is, in short, Utopia. Trying to reach this impossible place, the narrator embarks on a series of misadventures, including an encounter with a loony knight who bellows, "I'm General Genghis Kahn Schmitz." ("The finest line I have ever written," Seuss once said.) Ultimately, he arrives at the outskirts of Solla Sollew — but he can't get inside. It seems that a key has been lost. Everybody's locked out. Frustrated, the city's gatekeeper declares that he's had enough: And I'm off to the city of Boola Boo Ball On the banks of the beautiful River Woo-Wall, Where they never have troubles! No troubles at all! Ah, yes: a place that's even better than Utopia. By this time, of course, the narrator has caught on. He goes back home to confront his troubles rather than avoid them.

It's a wonderful book with a beautiful message — and in Seuss's liberal universe, perhaps even a subversive one.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: catinthehat; drseuss
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To: KantianBurke
I look at "Horton Hears a Who" as an inadvertantly pro-life story. "A Who is a Who no matter how small." I think he intended it to be about nuclear war.
21 posted on 11/21/2003 10:48:39 AM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: shattered
of course Dr. Seuss would have loved to live in a liberal paradise such as this country:

where the earth was treated much better. (sarcasm off) The environment is better off in the hands of a country with a representative democracy and capitalism such as ours.

22 posted on 11/21/2003 10:49:32 AM PST by KantianBurke (Don't Tread on Me)
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To: shattered
I agree that caring about the environment crosses party lines, but I would go even further and say that environmentalism used to be peculiarly a characteristic of the Republican party from the beginning.

The earliest Republican candidates and presidents supported national parks and conservation, and it was a Republican president (IIRC Grant) who dedicated the first national park.

23 posted on 11/21/2003 10:49:53 AM PST by CobaltBlue (I am the Lorax! I speak for the trees. I speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues.)
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To: KantianBurke
Green Eggs and Ham was one of my favorites.

24 posted on 11/21/2003 10:50:02 AM PST by Chewbacca (I talk to myself because it is the only way I can have an intelligent conversation.)
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To: KantianBurke
I had the privilege of meeting and talking with Alexander Kerensky, forty years ago. I know the history of his democratic government, that was overthrown by Vladimir Lenin. The nonsense of this article begins with the implication that Kerensky was on a continuum that lead in a short step from him to Lenin. That is unmitigated twaddle.

As for the rest of the article, I agree with your comment. These are CHILDREN'S BOOKS, for crying out loud. The writer of this article is getting his knickers in a twist over nothing.

Congressman Billybob

Latest column, "Double Crossing at the Rio Grande," discussion thread. IF YOU WANT A FREEPER IN CONGRESS, CLICK HERE.

25 posted on 11/21/2003 10:51:00 AM PST by Congressman Billybob (www.ArmorforCongress.com Visit. Join. Help. Please.)
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To: Burkeman1
Thanks for the sanity.

What sanity? Suess characters?

26 posted on 11/21/2003 10:51:36 AM PST by cornelis
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To: KantianBurke
No idea onthe politics of his books, but kids certainly enjoy them. No harm there.

I dislike Geisel for his personal behavior though. Didn't he treat his first wife dreadfully as she was dying for a long illness, carrying on with a mutual friend as his wife lay dying, driving her to suicide? Or am I thinking of another Dr Seuss? ;-)
27 posted on 11/21/2003 10:52:54 AM PST by HitmanLV (I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.)
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To: cornelis
I like "Marvin K. Mooney." It's fun.

Towards the end of my Seuss reading years, my favorite was "There's a Wocket in My Pocket!", with the yeps on the steps and the bofa on the sofa.
28 posted on 11/21/2003 10:53:15 AM PST by CobaltBlue (You can go by boat, you can go by rail, you can stamp yourself and go by mail!)
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To: livius
The message was definitely one of mushy liberalism, at best, but I think it was just typical of the times in which it was written and the class of people among whom he lived (and probably for whom he was writing).

Try "Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose." The story line should make any conservative stand up and cheer. Thidwick kindly lets an ant take a ride on his antlers. The ant invites his friend the bird, who invites his friend the squirrel, etc., until Thidwick can barely support the group nesting on his head. Eventually, Thidwick is cornered by hunters. He can't escape because of the weight on his head. But then... Thidwick sheds his antlers. It's that time of the year. And Thidwick escapes to join up with the rest of the herd. The freeloaders wind up stuffed, mounted and hung over the hunter's mantlepiece.

29 posted on 11/21/2003 10:53:52 AM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: KantianBurke
I'm reminded of Jesse Jackson reading "Green Eggs and Ham" on SNL. Hilarious.
30 posted on 11/21/2003 10:54:49 AM PST by asformeandformyhouse (If it's not a baby, then you're not pregnant.)
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To: Congressman Billybob
These are CHILDREN'S BOOKS, for crying out loud

Is that a crying argument?

31 posted on 11/21/2003 10:54:52 AM PST by cornelis
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To: HitmanNY
Fooling around while his wife was in bed with cancer? Sure you don't mean Newt Gingrich?
32 posted on 11/21/2003 10:55:36 AM PST by CobaltBlue
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To: cornelis
And if I describe it now I'd say it was the child's version of "Waiting for Godot."

LOL! I had a negative reaction as an adult, but mostly because the ending seemed like a cheap out. My kids liked it though. They saw it as a joke.

33 posted on 11/21/2003 10:57:21 AM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: CobaltBlue
Our Religious Ed Department recommends "Horton Hears a Who" for "Respect Life" classes.

Because as Horton says: "A person's a person, no matter how small"

...
34 posted on 11/21/2003 11:01:23 AM PST by cyncooper ("The evil is in plain sight")
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To: shattered
IMO, being against the destruction of the earth's forests, water and air as depicted in the the Lorax crosses party lines, or should. Dr. Suess may have been a liberal but lots of people care about preserving nature where possible.

Of course you're right, but some people here won't be happy until the last tree is cut down to clear space for a restaurant that specializes in endangered species.

35 posted on 11/21/2003 11:03:57 AM PST by WackyKat
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To: Chewbacca
"Green Eggs and Ham"

And for very young children just learning to read you can't beat "Hop on Pop".

To this day we still fling out little phrases from that book like "Upside down like Mr. Brown".
36 posted on 11/21/2003 11:04:02 AM PST by cyncooper ("The evil is in plain sight")
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To: KantianBurke
Ever read "The Lorax?" Paints industry as environmental rapists. But it was written in a time when there were virtually no restrictions on developing land too.
37 posted on 11/21/2003 11:05:36 AM PST by bethelgrad (for God, country, and the Corps OOH RAH!)
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To: KantianBurke
Theodore Giesl, "Dr. Seuss", was a master propagandist, and a lifelong admirer of the Soviet Union. He was involved in some of the blackest anti-Nazi diatribes ever launched in the name of the US government under FDR, which expressed most eloquently his admiration of the Josef Stalin who took up arms against Adolf Hitler. And you thought his colorful books were innocent children's tales?

The Seuss books have been around for a couple of generations now. The public school teachers got this indoctrination before they started school themselves, and they have a receptive audience now for the propaganda buried in the pages of "The Lorax" and the "Star-Bellied Sneeches".
38 posted on 11/21/2003 11:06:42 AM PST by alloysteel
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To: KantianBurke
I'm sorry if some children's books don't meet your test for Ideological Purity

39 posted on 11/21/2003 11:07:00 AM PST by WackyKat
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To: Aquinasfan
the like it though

If it's gonna work at all, subversion is likeable and wears a smile.

40 posted on 11/21/2003 11:07:17 AM PST by cornelis
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