Does "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" have a hidden message? - David B. Parker

1,536,239 views ・ 2017-03-06

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In the summer of 1963,
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a high school teacher changed the way the world looked at "The Wizard of Oz."
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His name was Henry Littlefield,
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and he was teaching an American history class.
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He'd made it to the late 19th century, a time called The Gilded Age,
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but he was struggling to keep his class interested
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in the complex social and economic issues of the time.
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Then one night, while he was reading
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"The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" to his daughters,
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he had an idea.
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In the 1890s, farmers wanted to add silver to the gold standard
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to put more money in circulation
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and make it easier for farmers to borrow.
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In the book, Dorothy walked to the Emerald City on the Yellow Brick Road
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in her silver shoes.
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The movie's ruby red slippers started out as silver.
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Silver and gold on the road to prosperity.
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L. Frank Baum had published the book in 1900
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at the height of The Gilded Age,
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and the analogy didn't seem out of the question.
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No one else had seen these connections,
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but that didn't deter Littlefield.
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He taught his class about The Gilded Age using the book,
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and soon he and his students were finding more connections.
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For instance, in the late 1890s,
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the U.S. had recently recovered from the Civil War
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and integrated vast new territories,
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bringing an era of prosperity for some.
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But while industry and finance in the North and East prospered,
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farmers across the South and Midwest struggled.
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This led to the Populist movement,
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uniting farmers and workers against urban elites.
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By 1896, the movement had grown into the People's Party,
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and its support of Democrat Williams Jennings Bryan
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put him in reach of the presidency.
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Meanwhile in Oz, claimed Littlefield,
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Dorothy is a typical American girl
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whose hard life in Kansas is literally turned upside down
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by powerful forces outside her control.
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The munchkins are the common people oppressed by the Witch of the East,
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banks and monopolies.
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The Scarecrow is the farmer,
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considered naive but actually quite resourceful,
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the Tin Woodman is the industrial worker dehumanized by factory labor,
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and the Cowardly Lion is William Jennings Bryan
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who could be an influential figure if only he were brave enough
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to adopt the Populist's radical program.
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Together, they travel along a golden yellow road
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towards a grand city whose ruler's power turns out to be built on illusions.
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Littlefield published some of these observations in an essay.
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His claim that this fantasy was actually a subversive critique
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of American capitalism appealed to many people in 1960s.
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Other scholars took up the theme,
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and the proposed analogies and connections multiplied.
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They suggested that Dorothy's dog Toto
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represented the teetotalers of the prohibition party.
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Oz was clearly the abbreviation for ounces,
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an important unit in the silver debate.
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The list goes on.
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By the 1980s, this understanding of the book was accepted so widely
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that several American history textbooks
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mentioned it in discussions of late 19th century politics.
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But is the theory right?
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L. Frank Baum's introduction claims the book is just an innocent children's story.
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Could he have been deliberately throwing people off the trail?
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And is it fair to second guess him so many decades later?
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There's no definitive answer,
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which is part of why authorial intent
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is a complex, tangled, fun question to unravel.
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And some recent scholars have interpreted "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz"
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in the opposite way as Littlefield.
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They claim it's a celebration of the new urban consumer culture.
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Historian William Leach argued that the dazzling Emerald City of Oz
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was meant to acclimate people to the shiny, new America.
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In the end, all we know for sure is that Baum,
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inspired by European folk legends,
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had set out to create one for American children.
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And whether or not he intended any hidden meanings,
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its continuing relevance suggests he succeeded
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in creating a fairytale America can call its own.
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