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The hidden messages in children’s books

15 points| westi | 11 years ago |bbc.com | reply

12 comments

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[+] sp332|11 years ago|reply
The "Werner Hertzog reads..." series on Youtube is pretty amazing. It ranges from a kinda silly, rambling take on Where's Waldo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvWh6PMi9Ek through a pretty thoughtful version of Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Z1R5vDG2Tg to an incredibly deep interpretation of Madeline https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57EDxvldLD4
[+] thesteamboat|11 years ago|reply
Thanks for sharing those; they are delightful.
[+] at-fates-hands|11 years ago|reply
I must have been some highly developed child growing up. When I was around 4 or 5 my parents read to a lot of Shel Silverstein and of course plenty of Dr. Seuss.

When I saw the Lorax film, I immediately knew it was about over consumption of resources and a little later on (ages 8 or 9) felt a strong environmental pull during the whole movie.

Even the Sliverstein books made me sad. Take for instance, the Giving Tree. People to this day talk about what the meaning really is:

https://www.mtholyoke.edu/omc/kidsphil/questions/Givingtree/...

When my parents read it to me, I was saddened by the fact the tree gave everything to the child, and the child never seemed appreciative of the gifts. On the one hand, I felt it was about being selfish and even when life has handed you everything, happiness was still elusive. On the other hand, it also spoke to me about generosity, and giving to others who don't have as much as you.

Other books just confused me. Alice in Wonderland just gave me nightmares, never mind what the actual meaning of the story was. I'm content to think it was just some crazy acid trip Carroll was recounting.

I feel like the more depressing themes seemed to connect with me as a child, while some of the deeper meanings (The LOTR series and Wizard of Oz) I totally missed. Even after seeing the Star Wars movies, a friend had point out all the biblical parallels. Like Darth Vader being his father. Father in German is Vater. Vader, Vater, it's so very close, but once pointed out, so obvious.

[+] goodcanadian|11 years ago|reply
I rarely see the deeper meanings that people claim are in these stories . . . I highly doubt many are put there deliberately. However, I do find it interesting what meanings people find. In the first instance, it is an interesting commentary on the way their minds work, but also, it is fascinating how ideas and new lines if thinking can be generated from truly unrelated material (which, in my opinion, is usually a good thing as long as you don't claim those ideas were put there by some sort of conspiracy).
[+] jerf|11 years ago|reply
One way of cutting through the BS is to see whether people agree with each other about the message. On one extreme, the Lorax clearly has an environmental message, and you'd be hard pressed to find an adult to read it and disagree with that. On the other extreme, the sheer variety of suggestions about what Alice in Wonderland is "really" about suggests that the vast bulk of them are quite wrong.
[+] ColinWright|11 years ago|reply

  > BBC Worldwide (International Site)
  > We're sorry but this site is not accessible
  > from the UK ...
[+] harryjo|11 years ago|reply
This article is talking about "lit crit" (literary criticism) and deconstruction, presented in a light and superficial way so the reader doesn't notice the depth of the topic.

Ironic!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deconstruction

[+] Kroem3r|11 years ago|reply
Well, it was until you pulled back the curtain.