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

1,597,488 views ・ 2017-03-06

TED-Ed


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

00:07
In the summer of 1963,
0
7664
1941
00:09
a high school teacher changed the way the world looked at "The Wizard of Oz."
1
9605
5039
00:14
His name was Henry Littlefield,
2
14644
1819
00:16
and he was teaching an American history class.
3
16463
2912
00:19
He'd made it to the late 19th century, a time called The Gilded Age,
4
19375
4620
00:23
but he was struggling to keep his class interested
5
23995
2491
00:26
in the complex social and economic issues of the time.
6
26486
3844
00:30
Then one night, while he was reading
7
30330
1518
00:31
"The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" to his daughters,
8
31848
2911
00:34
he had an idea.
9
34759
1730
00:36
In the 1890s, farmers wanted to add silver to the gold standard
10
36489
4290
00:40
to put more money in circulation
11
40779
2031
00:42
and make it easier for farmers to borrow.
12
42810
3057
00:45
In the book, Dorothy walked to the Emerald City on the Yellow Brick Road
13
45867
4632
00:50
in her silver shoes.
14
50499
2040
00:52
The movie's ruby red slippers started out as silver.
15
52539
3849
00:56
Silver and gold on the road to prosperity.
16
56388
3392
00:59
L. Frank Baum had published the book in 1900
17
59780
3190
01:02
at the height of The Gilded Age,
18
62970
1730
01:04
and the analogy didn't seem out of the question.
19
64700
3219
01:07
No one else had seen these connections,
20
67919
2019
01:09
but that didn't deter Littlefield.
21
69938
2053
01:11
He taught his class about The Gilded Age using the book,
22
71991
3270
01:15
and soon he and his students were finding more connections.
23
75261
4169
01:19
For instance, in the late 1890s,
24
79430
2071
01:21
the U.S. had recently recovered from the Civil War
25
81501
3160
01:24
and integrated vast new territories,
26
84661
2271
01:26
bringing an era of prosperity for some.
27
86932
3552
01:30
But while industry and finance in the North and East prospered,
28
90484
3885
01:34
farmers across the South and Midwest struggled.
29
94369
4332
01:38
This led to the Populist movement,
30
98701
2013
01:40
uniting farmers and workers against urban elites.
31
100714
4437
01:45
By 1896, the movement had grown into the People's Party,
32
105151
4321
01:49
and its support of Democrat Williams Jennings Bryan
33
109472
2881
01:52
put him in reach of the presidency.
34
112353
2558
01:54
Meanwhile in Oz, claimed Littlefield,
35
114911
2271
01:57
Dorothy is a typical American girl
36
117182
2600
01:59
whose hard life in Kansas is literally turned upside down
37
119782
3910
02:03
by powerful forces outside her control.
38
123692
3970
02:07
The munchkins are the common people oppressed by the Witch of the East,
39
127662
4092
02:11
banks and monopolies.
40
131754
2019
02:13
The Scarecrow is the farmer,
41
133773
1848
02:15
considered naive but actually quite resourceful,
42
135621
3412
02:19
the Tin Woodman is the industrial worker dehumanized by factory labor,
43
139033
5210
02:24
and the Cowardly Lion is William Jennings Bryan
44
144243
3070
02:27
who could be an influential figure if only he were brave enough
45
147313
3842
02:31
to adopt the Populist's radical program.
46
151155
3409
02:34
Together, they travel along a golden yellow road
47
154564
2970
02:37
towards a grand city whose ruler's power turns out to be built on illusions.
48
157534
6141
02:43
Littlefield published some of these observations in an essay.
49
163675
3769
02:47
His claim that this fantasy was actually a subversive critique
50
167444
3500
02:50
of American capitalism appealed to many people in 1960s.
51
170944
4771
02:55
Other scholars took up the theme,
52
175715
2080
02:57
and the proposed analogies and connections multiplied.
53
177795
3779
03:01
They suggested that Dorothy's dog Toto
54
181574
2121
03:03
represented the teetotalers of the prohibition party.
55
183695
3940
03:07
Oz was clearly the abbreviation for ounces,
56
187635
2951
03:10
an important unit in the silver debate.
57
190586
2189
03:12
The list goes on.
58
192775
1990
03:14
By the 1980s, this understanding of the book was accepted so widely
59
194765
4330
03:19
that several American history textbooks
60
199095
2321
03:21
mentioned it in discussions of late 19th century politics.
61
201416
4220
03:25
But is the theory right?
62
205636
2128
03:27
L. Frank Baum's introduction claims the book is just an innocent children's story.
63
207764
4370
03:32
Could he have been deliberately throwing people off the trail?
64
212134
3569
03:35
And is it fair to second guess him so many decades later?
65
215703
3670
03:39
There's no definitive answer,
66
219373
1511
03:40
which is part of why authorial intent
67
220884
2371
03:43
is a complex, tangled, fun question to unravel.
68
223255
3940
03:47
And some recent scholars have interpreted "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz"
69
227195
3342
03:50
in the opposite way as Littlefield.
70
230537
2378
03:52
They claim it's a celebration of the new urban consumer culture.
71
232915
4749
03:57
Historian William Leach argued that the dazzling Emerald City of Oz
72
237664
4480
04:02
was meant to acclimate people to the shiny, new America.
73
242144
4641
04:06
In the end, all we know for sure is that Baum,
74
246785
3001
04:09
inspired by European folk legends,
75
249786
2199
04:11
had set out to create one for American children.
76
251985
3570
04:15
And whether or not he intended any hidden meanings,
77
255555
2951
04:18
its continuing relevance suggests he succeeded
78
258506
3240
04:21
in creating a fairytale America can call its own.
79
261746
3930
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7