Title: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
1The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
2L. Frank Baum - The Writer of Oz
3L. Frank Baum
- L. Frank Baum was born near Syracuse, New York in
1856 when Franklin Pierce (1853-1857) was
President and the tension over slavery or
free-soil for the West was coming to a head. - With his wife and two sons, he moved to the
little prairie town of Aberdeen, South Dakota in
1887, where he edited the local weekly newsletter
until it failed in 1891. - Grover Cleveland was president (1885-1889) and
the Interstate Commerce Act with its Interstate
Commerce Commission had been passed and
established to make railroad charges fair and
reasonable for Western farmers and ranchers - Benjamin Harrison barely beat Cleveland in the
election of 1888 and under Harrison the Billion
Dollar Congress became infamous and the Silver
Purchase Act allowed for more silver coinage and
more greenbacks supported by silver its
failure to increase the money supply and the
panic of 1893 led to its repeal - In 1890, the McKinley Tariff Act had boosted the
surpluses in the Federal Treasury to their
highest levels in peacetime up to that timeonly
to be lost to the greed of Congress and the Panic
of 1893 - In 1891 Baum and his family moved to Chicago,
Illinois, the new center of industry and Western
farm goods and cattle in the American Midwest.
4Baum and the Populist Party
- Chicago was hard-hit by the Panic of 1893, and
this seemed to push Baum into support of the new
political party whose movement he had seen
develop in the late 1880s, the Populist Party. - POPULISM
- The Populist Party was formed in Omaha, Nebraska
in 1892 - It is no accident that Populism arose from this
state within which the turmoil of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act and the theme of Popular
Sovereignty had shaped the course of American
history toward Civil War - The Populist Party was made up of farmers,
grangers, and former Greenback Party members - The Greenback Party had supported the increase in
the supply of greenbacks (the Federal paper
currency of the Civil War) to lead to a rise in
prices (inflation) so that farmers could earn
more money to pay off their debts it attempted
to get presidents into office in the 1876, 1880,
and 1884 elections, disappearing into the
Populist Party - The Populists Supported the following measures
increased money supply, free silver, more
government regulation of business and industry,
and increased political power for ordinary voters - The Populist Party would put up presidential
candidates in 1892 and 1896, and Baum
participated in the campaigns.
5Baum and Theosophy
- Originally a Methodist, Baum joined the Episcopal
Church in Aberdeen to participate in community
theatricals. - Later, in 1897, he and his wife, encouraged by
Matilda Joslyn Gage (a radical suffragist who
argued that women should get the vote not because
of any superior morality, but because it was a
natural right she was a critic of the Christian
Church, but was also deeply religious, helping to
write Elizabeth Cady Stantons The Womans
Bible), became Theosophists. - Theosophists held that all religions are attempts
by some Spiritual Hierarchy to help humanity in
evolving to greater perfection, and that each
religion therefore has a portion of the truth. - Baum's beliefs are often reflected in his
writing, though the only mention of a church in
his Oz books is the porcelin one which the
Cowardly Lion breaks in the Dainty China Country
in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. -
- The Baums also sent their older sons to Ethical
Culture Sunday School in Chicago, which taught
morality, not religion.
6Whos Who in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
7Henry M. Littlefields Analysis
- Dorothy represents the good-hearted, always
hopeful, but also self-sufficient American
individual of the Midwest. - Wicked Witch of the East is the representation of
the rich industrialists and bankers of the East - Wicked Witch of the West is the representation of
a cruel, uncaring, but intelligent nature
enslaving the natives and the newcomers to the
West - The Munchkins are the little people under the
control of these industrialists and bankers - The Flying Monkeys are the Native Americans of
the West - The Scarecrow represents the wise but
simple-minded or naïve Western Farmers - The Tin Woodman represents the dehumanized or
machine-like industrial workers of the North and
the East - The Cowardly Lion represents the Democratic
/Populist presidential candidate of 1896, William
Jennings Bryan - The Yellow Brick Road is the representation of
the Gold Standard supported by the Eastern
industrialists and bankers - The Silver Slippers on Dorothys feet are the new
Silver Standard supported by the Populists and
their predecessors - The Emerald City is Washington, D.C. where all
the golden roads lead - The Wizard of Oz is any of the Gilded Age
presidents from Rutherford B. Hayes (1877-1881)
to William McKinley (1897-1901)
8Henry M. Littlefields Dorothy
- In Baums book, the character of Dorothy is not
much like the character from the film. - For example, in the film the Lion, the Scarecrow,
and the Tinman come to her rescue near the end,
however, it is Dorothy who rescues them from the
Wicked Witch of the West in the book. - Dorothy was not a damsel in distress by any
means.
- The inspiration for this strong-willed Dorothy
may have been the lecturer, writer, and political
activist Mary Elizabeth Lease (1850-1933). - Lease was a Populist who famously advised Kansas
farmers to "raise less corn and more hell." - She believed that large business would make the
people of America slaves - "Wall street owns the country. It is no longer a
government of the people, by the people, and for
the people, but a government of Wall Street, by
Wall Street, and for Wall Street. The great
common people of this country are slaves, and
monopoly is the master."
9Henry M. Littlefields Wicked Witch of the East
- Baum identifies the Wicked Witch of the East as
the industrialists and bankers of Wall Street who
ran the new mechanized industrial, consumer
economy developing in the late 1800s. - As the investors and financiers of the new
industrial economy, they preferred gold as the
monetary standard, keeping America in step with
Europe and much of the rest of the world.
- The richest man on Earth, after he bought out his
closest competitor, was J.P. Morgan, who would
later fund the construction of the R.M.S.
Titanic. - Ridiculously rich, especially after selling out
to Morgan, was Andrew Carnegie, who took his
money and opened up new libraries all over the
country, especially in the West. - Last, but not least, was John D. Rockefeller,
whose Standard Oil Company moved the industrial
revolution into the modern petroleum-based
economy of today.
10Henry M. Littlefields Wicked Witch of the West
- In Baums book, the Wicked Witch of the West is
quite the coward she is afraid of the dark,
never leaves her castle, and carries an umbrella
for fear of rain which will kill her. - In the film, she is the epitome of evil and she
is also green in the book she is pale from lack
of blood and is missing an eye. - The West she rules is rough, hilly, and devoid of
farms and houses, a wasteland.
- The Wicked Witch of the West is sentient and
malign nature an intelligent and bad force. - Afraid of Dorothy at first, because of the mark
Glinda put on her forehead and the Silver shoes,
she soon realizes that Dorothy is ignorant of the
powers she has and can be manipulated into being
her servant. - Only in trying to get the shoes off Dorothy by
tripping her does the Witch end up getting doused
by Dorothys bucket of water.
11Henry M. Littlefields Munchkins
- The Munchkins are the little people, that is,
the everyday, ordinary citizens who do not have
much political power. - In the film, they are literally depicted as
little people, although clearly in the book the
Tinman, being an industrial worker, is a
Munchkin, too. - Disempowered by the political power that the
industrialists and bankers have at their
fingertips because of their wealth, the
Munchkins of America begin looking for a savior
figure who will restore their notions of an
America of opportunity and wealth.
Workers of the Lollipop Guild
- In Littlefields analysis, with the death of the
Wicked Witch of the East, crushed under Dorothys
house, a new hope is possible in the West, if
only the Wicked Witch out there can be defeated,
too. - Dorothy, the self-sufficient, strong-willed
Midwesterner, and Populist is the potential
savior the people enslaved by the Eastern
industrial economy have been looking for.
12Henry M. Littlefields Flying Monkeys
- Summoned by the Wicked Witch of the Wests golden
cap, the Flying Monkeys are used by her to
capture Dorothy and dispose of her friends. - Littlefield asserts that they are a substitute
for the plains Indians
Once we were a free people, living happily in the
great forest, flying from tree to tree, eating
nuts and fruit, and doing just as we pleased
without calling anybody master.
- Baum makes it clear that the monkeys are not bad,
they are merely under the control of evil, thus
they do evil. - Historically, though, the American missionary
zeal of converting the Native Americans to
Christianity and civilizing them was matched
only by the equally historical approach of
systematically wiping them out. - The Dawes Severalty Act of 1877 saw the Federally
supervised dislocation and destruction of Naïve
tribal life.
13Henry M. Littlefields Scarecrow
- The Scarecrow is the first character that Dorothy
meets when she sets out on the Yellow Brick Road. - Littlefield quotes William Allen Whites 1896
article, Whats the Matter With Kansas, in which
he accused Kansas farmers of ignorance,
irrationality, and general muddle-headedness.
- Baum is clearly influenced by this article, but
only to turn it upside down and have the
Scarecrow be the wisest of the bunch. - The Scarecrow is hitched up on a pole or cross,
and this was a familiar image for farmers at the
time.
14Henry M. Littlefields Tin Woodman
- Littlefield asserts that the Tin Woodman was a
representation of the industrial workers of the
East who had been dehumanized by the growing
mechanization of the economy they had to work
by the rhythm of the machines, not their own
natural ones. - In the story, the Tin Woodman was a man once, but
he kept chopping off his own body parts, having
them replaced by tin his need for a heart
symbolizes his dehumanization.
- Baum did not invent the character out of thin
air, instead, like most of the characters, he
borrowed it from contemporary society. - Sapolio, started in 1868 in New York City by
Enoch Morgan Sons, was a pioneering company in
the use of mass-marketing the Tinman ad is from
1900. - At the Columbia Exhibition of 1893 in Chicago,
Illinois, an enterprising entrepreneur of the
handmade car draws attention with his own Tinman.
15Henry M. Littlefields Yellow Brick Road
- The Yellow Brick Road is the symbol of the Gold
Standard favored by the industrialists and
bankers of the East. - The conflict between the Western farmers and
their Eastern creditors over falling crop prices
and rising debt led to the formation of the
Greenback Party in 1874 and then the Populist
Party in 1892. - Both parties sought to increase the money supply
with silver in order to generate inflation to
bring crop prices back up for the benefit of
farmers.
In the film, the road begins like the end of a
swirling tornado
- Interestingly, there actually was a yellow brick
road between Bethlehem and Normansville, New
York. - This road was constructed in 1863, but has since
fallen into disuse, some of it being paved over
with asphalt. - An enormous yellow brick road exists today in
the historic center of Sofia, Bulgaria it was
constructed in 1917.
16Henry M. Littlefields Silver Slippers
- After the discovery of large silver reserves such
as the Comstock Lode in the West immediately
after the Civil War, one faction in American
politics began to agitate for the federal
government to allow silver to be minted freely at
the rate of 1 per troy ounce (the official
measurement for precious metals). - The gold standard at the time valued gold at the
official price of 20 per troy ounce, the result
of this policy would have been a considerable
increase in the money supply and inflation.
In the film, slippers are ruby red to contrast
better with the Yellow Brick Road
- The Republican Party opposed Free Silver, arguing
that the best road to national prosperity was
"sound money," a policy of attempting to maintain
or even increase the dollar's value. - This rewarded those who had accumulated wealth
and provided them with a strong incentive to
produce and accumulate even more, which they saw
as the engine driving industrial economic growth.
- Farmers and other debtors wanted free silver to
increase (161 oz) the money supply for inflation
of crop prices so they could pay their debts.
17Henry M. Littlefields Emerald City
- Littlefield asserts that the Emerald City of Oz
is Washington, D.C., the national capitol to
which all the gold leads and all the wealth
controls. - Interestingly, a worry of some delegates to the
Constitutional Convention in 1787 was that the
new national capitol would be paved with streets
of gold. - The color green (emerald) is symbolic of the
greenbacks printed by the Federal Treasury.
18Henry M. Littlefields Wizard of Oz
- Coming straight from the fair-grounds of Omaha,
Nebraska, the Wizard of Oz symbolizes the
American criterion for leadership he is able to
be every-thing to everybody which means he is
ultimately nothing but hot air. - Littlefield states that he is a little bumbling
old man who might be any president from Grant
(1869) to McKinley (1901). - It is significant that he hides behind all sorts
of impressive though simplistic special effects
and commits himself to nothing that he cannot
deliver.
19William Jennings Bryan - The Cowardly Lion
20William Jennings Bryan
- William Jennings Bryan was born in Salem,
Illinois the year that Abraham Lincoln won the
presidential election, 1860. - His father, Silas, served as a sort of "gentleman
farmer" and William Jennings Bryan grew up in
this agricultural setting - In 1872, Silas left his law practice to run for
the House of Representatives, with the backing of
both the Democratic and Greenback parties, but
lost to a Republican and returned to his law
practice - Bryan was religiously home schooled until age 10,
holding for the rest of his life strong religious
views like gambling and liquor were evil and
sinful. - Following high school, he entered Illinois
College and graduated as valedictorian in 1881,
and he then, like Baum, moved to Chicago and
there studied law at Union Law College. - Like Lincoln, William Jennings Bryan would become
known for his exceptional oratorical skills,
which, unlike his own father, landed him in the
House of Representatives for Nebraska from 1891
1895. - It was in the House of Representatives that he
advocated the adoption of free silver coinage at
the fixed rate of 16 oz. to 1 oz. with gold. - He lost his bid for the Senate in 1894 when
Republicans swept the elections.
21William Jennings Bryan The Cross of Gold
- At the 1896 Democratic National Convention, Bryan
galvan-ized the silver forces to defeat the
Bourbon Democrats, who supported incumbent
President Grover Cleveland (Grover the Bad) and
who had long controlled the party. -
- His famous Cross of Gold speech, delivered
prior to voting for the presidential nominee,
lambasted Western monied classes for supporting
the Gold Standard at the expense of the average
worker
Having behind us the producing masses of this
nation and the world, supported by the commercial
interests, the laboring interests and the toilers
everywhere, we will answer their demand for a
gold standard by saying to them You shall not
press down upon the brow of labor this crown of
thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a
cross of gold.
- Bryan's stance, directly opposing the
conservative Cleveland and the Bourbon Democrats,
united the agrarian and silver factions and won
him the nomination.
22William Jennings Bryan The Populist Danger
- Republicans ridiculed Bryan as a Populist, mainly
because they could see the danger that he
represented, the loss of profits for
industrialists and bankers. - The Republicans nominated William McKinley on a
program of prosperity through industrial growth,
high tariffs and sound money, i.e., gold. - However, Republicans discovered that, by August,
Bryan was solidly ahead in the South and West,
though far behind in the Northeast however he
also appeared to be ahead in the Midwest, so the
Republicans concentrated their efforts there. -
- They counter-crusaded against Bryan, warning that
he was a madman a religious fanatic surrounded
by anarchists who would wreck the economy. - By late September, the Republicans felt they were
ahead in the decisive Midwest and began
emphasizing that McKinley would bring prosperity
to every group of Americans. -
- McKinley scored solid gains among the middle
classes, factory and railroad workers, prosperous
farmers and among the German Americans who
rejected free silver.
23William Jennings Bryan The Coward
- After the Spanish-American War, Bryan (who served
in Florida and not in combat) came to denounce
the imperialism that resulted from it. He, like
Mark Twain, strongly opposed the annexation of
the Philippines (though he did support the Treaty
of Paris that ended the war). - He ran as an anti-imperialist in 1900, finding
himself in an awkward alliance with Andrew
Carnegie and other millionaire anti-imperialists,
forcing him to try to combine anti-imperialism
with free silver
The nation is of age and it can do what it
pleases it can spurn the traditions of the past
it can repudiate the principles upon which the
nation rests it can employ force instead of
reason it can substitute might for right it can
conquer weaker people it can exploit their
lands, appropriate their property and kill their
people but it cannot repeal the moral law or
escape the punishment decreed for the violation
of human rights.
- Republicans mocked Bryan as indecisive, or even a
coward for not holding fast to his old themes,
and it is from this that high school history
teacher Henry Littlefield claimed that Bryan was
echoed in the portrayal of the Cowardly Lion in
Baums The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900).
24Littlefields Emerald City Revisited
- Although it is clear that Washington, D.C. is a
good candidate for the Emerald City, since it was
the locus of power then as it is now, it is also
clear that as far as an actual influence on his
imagination, Chicago, and in particular the
Columbian Exhibition of 1893 is far more like the
Emerald City than the nations capitol.
25FIN