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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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| Search | Most Recent | The Daily Ozmapolitan |
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| News from Glinda's Great Book of Records |
| Traveling the Yellow Brick Road: What We Learn from The Wizard of Oz and Wicked |
| 2026 | |
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Author(s): Keslowitz, Steven |
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Publisher(s): McFarland |
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Genre(s): Literary Criticism |
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Comments: In many ways, The Wizard of Oz and Wicked are representative of the American dream, reflecting both its promises and contradictions. Their enduring intrigue lies in how they engage the American spirit as separate works that share a distinct universe. By reimagining the moral framework of the original film, Wicked challenges long held beliefs about the nature of heroism, villainy, and truth. Together, the films offer a complex portrait of American motivations and obstacles. Centered on character, journey, and perspective, this book explores what these stories teach us about identity, ethics, and the human impulse to divide the world into categories of good and evil. It also reveals the layered political allegories and symbolic structures embedded in both films through close reading and cultural analysis, situating Oz within contemporary social and political contexts and emphasizing themes such as censorship, environmentalism, disability discrimination, and the opioid crisis. By reframing Oz not as a nostalgic escape but as a mirror of societal contradictions, it illuminates various, and often uncomfortable, truths about American identity and culture. |
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