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Authors Illustrators Publishers Titles
Years Genre There's No Place Like Home The Great Oz Knows Why You Have Come How Very Resourceful Pay No Attention to That Man Behind the Curtain |
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| Wizard of Oz: How a Children’s Tale Exposes the Modern Illusion, The |
| 2025 | |
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Author(s): Whitcombe, G.R. |
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Publisher(s): Independently Published |
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Genre(s): Religious & Spiritual |
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Comments: The Wizard of Oz: How a Children’s Tale Exposes the Modern Illusion does not argue that L. Frank Baum set out to write a secret political tract, nor that the story contains a coded manifesto waiting to be decoded. Instead, it advances a more limited and historically grounded claim: that stories absorb the conditions of the worlds in which they are written, and that some narrative structures endure because they continue to align with how authority, perception, and reassurance are organised in everyday life. Written in a calm, investigative style, the book examines how Oz operates internally before widening the lens outward. It traces the story’s reliance on guided paths, mediated perception, distant authority, symbolic rewards, and carefully managed closure. Each element is examined for what it does within the narrative rather than what it is presumed to “mean.” |
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