Dana Younger Gallery

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dana Younger Gallery DANA YOUNGER GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last Sky Fire Frank Asch The Fox Jumped Over the Parson’s Gate Randolph Caldecott Lucy and Loki Barbara Cooney The Brownies Latest Adventures Palmer Cox Angelina and the Princess Helen Craig Raggedy Ann’s Lucky Pennies Johnny Gruelle Sheila Rae, the Brave Kevin Henkes Bread and Jam for Frances Lillian Hoban Danny and the Dinosaur Syd Hoff Presents For Lupe Dorothy Lathrop A Dog Came to School Lois Lenski James Marshall’s Mother Goose James Marshall The Wonder City of Oz John R. Neill The Pied Piper of Hamelin Arthur Rackham Cecily G. and the Nine Monkeys Hans Augusto Rey The Library David Small A Game of Ball Jessie Willcox Smith The Wind in the Willows Paul Bransom Clifford’s Happy Easter Norman Bridwell Cinderella Marcia Brown Elevator Clinton Johnston Mary Had a Little Lamb Tomie dePaola Uncle Wiggily Arthur Seiden The Poppy Seed Cakes Maud & Miska Petersham Anderson’s Fairy Tales Helen Stratton A Flower Wedding Walter Crane The Three Bears Paul Galdone Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Bill Peet The Rover Boys at College Charles Nuttall Rockets Don’t Go to Chicago, Andy Meg Wohlberg Franklin’s New Friend Brenda Clark Fun Wherever We Are Bob Childress The Picture-Poetry Book Lois Mailou Jones Stories to Tell the Littlest Ones Willy Pogany Paddington at the Sea-Side Fred Banbery Mother Goose William Wallace Denslow SPEAK! Alexandra Day Garfield and Friends Television Series Jim Davis Skippyjon Jones in the Dog-House Judith Byron Schachner Bad Dog, Marley Richard Cowdrey The Wind in the Willows Tasha Tudor Gilbert the Surfer Dude Diane deGroat The Magic School Bus and the Climate Challenge Bruce Degen Llama Llama Misses Mama Anna Dewdney The Adventures of Peter Cottontail Harrison Cady Bad Kitty and Uncle Murray Nick Bruel Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes James Dean Nate the Great Marc Simont Fancy Nancy Aspiring Artist Robin Preiss Glasser Baby Max and Ruby - Sandbox Rosemary Wells Little Golden Calendar Richard Scarry Amelia Bedelia’s First Field Trip Lynne Avril Where the Wild Things Are (Unpublished) Maurice Sendak Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Giles Greenfield MILLER GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last Michael Hague’s Mother Goose Michael Hague Encore for Eleanor Bill Peet The Very First Story Ever Told Lisl Weil Dean’s New Gift Book of Nursery Rhymes Janet & Anne Grahame-Johnstone Songs of Mother Goose Robin Spowart Wendy Watson’s Mother Goose Wendy Watson Ring o’ Roses L. Leslie Brooke How the Elephant Got His Trunk Marta Carrasco The Nursery Rhyme Book Rene Cloke How the Elephant Got His Trunk Mary D. Hanson Mammoth Patrick O’Brien Mother Goose William Wallace Denslow Take Me Out to the Ball Game John Stadler Many Luscious Lollipops Ruth Heller Ring o’ Roses L. Leslie Brooke I’m a Little Tea Pot Iza Trapani Elephant Baby Fred Brenner You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You Michael Emberley Sonny Elephant Berta & Elmer Hader The Telephone Blair Lent Santa Clause is Coming to Town Steven Kellogg Hello Tilly Polly Dunbar Circus Opposites Suse MacDonald Parachute Matt Ottley Elephants on Board Suse MacDonald Hidden Hippo Clare Beaton Bernard’s Bath Dominic Catalano Catbirds & Dogfish Bernard Most WILSON GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last American Tall Tales Michael McCurdy The Patchwork Farmer Craig Brown Pecos Bill Bert Dodson The Detroit Free Press Edward McCandlish Rip Van Winkle Edward McCandlish Pecos Bill: The Roughest, Toughest, Best Benton (Ben) Mahan Oink Arthur Geisert Molasses Flood Blair Lent John Tabor’s Ride Blair Lent Mike Fink Steven Kellogg Pecos Bill Steven Kellogg I Was Born About 10,000 Years Ago Steven Kellogg Johnny Appleseed Steven Kellogg Paul Bunyan Steven Kellogg Sally Ann Thunder Ann Whirlwind Crockett Steven Kellogg Johnny Appleseed Steven Kellogg Rattlesnake Stew Lynn Rowe Reed Stormalong Don Vanderbeek A Ball for Daisy Chris Raschka Sleepy Hollow Sleepover - A to Z Mystery Series John Steven Gurney Moby Dick Will Eisner Flora and the Penguin Molly Idle Chalk Bill Thomson Moo! Mike Wohnoutka The Typewriter Bill Thomson The Whale Ethan & Vita Murrow LAIHO GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last Genesis of Spring Paul Johnson The Monkey Theatre Lothar Meggendorfer Nanta’s Lion Suse MacDonald The Magic Fan Keith Baker Octopus Julie Chen The Magic Picture Martha Alexander Swimming With Humuhumu Tammy Yee The Bunnies’ Christmas Eve Wendy Watson Ribbit! Fred Bender The Falling Star Carlo Alberto Michelini DC Super Heroes: The Ultimate Pop-Up Book Matthew Reinhart What A Mess! A Pop-Up Misadventure Keith Allen Best-Loved Stories: Pop-Up Treasury Jeffrey (Jeff) Ebbeler Love Bugs Mini Edition David Carter One Red Dot David Carter MILES GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last Barnyard Banter Denise Fleming Effie Barbara Reid An Egg and Seven Socks Marylin Hafner Danny and the Dinosaur Go to Camp Syd Hoff The Mud Family Paul Morin Counting Crocodiles Will Hillenbrand Bumble Bee Victoria Raymond The Cat in the Hat Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss) The Witch Casts a Spell Barbara Olsen Gigantic Patrick O’Brien The Man Who Loved Books Trina Schart Hyman Midnight in the Cemetery Robin Brickman Over in the Ocean Jeanette Canyon How Do Dinosaurs Get Well Soon? Mark Teague Fiona Loves the Night Amanda Shepherd Gallop! Rufus Seder A Silent Night for Peef Warren Hanson Mike Fink Steven Kellogg The Mysterious Tadpole Steven Kellogg The Dragon Machine Wayne Anderson Parachute Matt Ottley Book Fiesta Rafael Lopez Dinotopia James Gurney Giving Thanks Pamela Dalton Fossil Bill Thomson Please Bring Balloons Lindsay Ward I Dreamt I was a Dinosaur Clare Beaton The Bird’s Song Momomi Sako REINHARDT GALLERY Book Title Illustrator First Illustrator Last Aida Leo & Diane Dillon May I Bring A Friend? Beni Montresor Eric Carle’s Animals Animals Eric Carle Many Luscious Lollipops Ruth Heller The King’s Equal Vladimir Vagin The Jolly Mon Lambert Davis The Seal Prince Kris Waldherr Andersen’s Fairy Tales Ib Spang Olsen Stories of Gods and Heroes Arthur Seiden Alexander the Great Sophia Zarambouka Sing a Song of Sixpence Tracey Campbell Pearson Climbing Jacobs Ladder Ashley Bryan Animal Dreaming Paul Morin King Crow Eric Rohmann The Tale of Lohengrin Willy Pogany The Water of Life Trina Schart Hyman A is for Aloha: A Hawaii Alphabet Tammy Yee Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky Blair Lent The Windmill Summer Fred Brenner Belinda in Paris Amy Young A Weave of Words Raul Colon Bringing in the New Year Grace Lin The Angry Moon Blair Lent Once Upon a Cool Motorcycle Dude Carol Heyer A Child’s Garden of Verses Barbara McClintock Englebert the Elephant Steven Kellogg The Emperor’s Cool Clothes Lee Harper Planting Rice At Grandpa’s House Momomi Sako The Keeping Quilt Patricia Polacco.
Recommended publications
  • Cartoon Illustration William Wallace Denslow
    Cartoon Illustration William Wallace Denslow Education Summary Students will learn the steps of illustration, including sketching a character, involving movement into their drawing, and adding color. They will learn about William Wallace Denslow who was an American illustrator and caricaturist who was most remembered for his work in collabora- tion with author L. Frank Baum, especially his illustrations for The Wonderful Wizard of OZ. Activity Summary Students will receive one piece of paper and a pencil. They will then choose a number from a hat. Beginning with 1 they will create plot twist in the story of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (ex: There is an earthquake rather than a tornado; Dorothy meats a robot rather than a tin man). They will then illustrate the scene. After tracing their sure lines with pen, they will add color to their illustrations. aced over their sure lines with pen. Objective After completing the lesson, students will have the ability to: • Define illustration. • Illustrate a character from their imagination using the steps they learned. Materials • Pens • Pencils • Large Drawing Paper (or any paper) • Color pencils • Construction paper Step by Step 1) begin sketching you scene. Your scene can be from a favorite movie, tv show, book, or one that you create with your imagination. 2) While sketching try to incorporate some movement (for example draw someone walking or a card driving by) 3) Once you are happy with your sketch begin coloring it in with your color pencils. 4) Try to incorporate shading and watch how the amount of pressure you apply on your pencil can really change the look of the drawing 5) Once you are happy with you work enjoy your masterpiece! .
    [Show full text]
  • Inside the Unconscious Mind 1
    Running head: INSIDE THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND 1 Inside the Unconscious Mind of an Author Marissa Tafolla Professor Cindy Chavez Writing 10 May 3, 2013 INSIDE THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND 2 Abstract According to Psychology in Modules by David G. Meyers, “the unconscious process consists of all mental processes that one is not aware of”, in other words all the things that are not actively being paid attention to for example filtered sensory information, automatic behavior, non- activated declarative memories and motivations. Freud Sigmund referred to it as unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories. Therefore, writing can be an existential, unconscious confession of our selves. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum, proved that by incorporating his childhood feelings in the story. As L. Frank Baum was a child he was mistreated by both of his highly strict parents. They pulled him away from his creativity and instead pushed him to become a successful entrepreneur, which was not what Baum desired. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was written by L. Frank Baum with the unconscious goal to rediscover his childhood history. He was never able to enjoy his childhood the way a child should, he was manipulated by his parents and was violently mistreated. He grew up with moral discipline enforced by his parents. He believed that no parent should ever be disrespected by their children. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is written to indirectly explain what he may have suffered as a child. The unconscious process works in a way in which you are not aware of what you are doing or why you are doing it, when Baum got older and was “free” he was able to do whatever his creative mind desired.
    [Show full text]
  • From Projections of the Past to Fantasies of the Future: Kansas and the Great Plains in Recent Film
    From Projections of the Past to Fantasies of the Future: Kansas and the Great Plains in Recent Film HGLWHGDQGLQWURGXFHGE\7KRPDV3UDVFK n Steven Spielberg’s /LQFROQ WKHPRVWZLGHO\DFFODLPHGVHHQDQGDZDUGZLQQLQJKLVWRULFDOÀOPRIWKHODVW IHZ\HDUVLWLVD.DQVDQZKRVSHDNVWKHÀUVWZRUGV3ULYDWH+DUROG*UHHQRIWKH6HFRQG.DQVDV&RORUHG,QIDQWU\ 6WULNLQJO\IHZUHYLHZHUVRIWKHÀOPKDYHFRPPHQWHGRQWKHIDFWWKDWLQWKHÀOP·VRSHQLQJPRPHQWV*UHHQWHOOV the president about a retributive war crime. In Tony Kushner’s screenplay, the soldier explains: “Some of us was in Ithe Second Kansas Colored. We fought the rebs at Jenkins’ Ferry last April, just after they’d killed every Negro soldier they captured at Poison Springs. So at Jenkins’ Ferry, we decided we warn’t taking no reb prisoners. And we didn’t leave a one of ‘em alive.” His summary of the Second Colored’s role at Jenkins’ Ferry corresponds closely to historical accounts (see, for example, Mark K. Christ, ´$OO&XWWR3LHFHVDQG*RQHWR+HOOµ7KH&LYLO:DU5DFH5HODWLRQVDQGWKH%DWWOH RI3RLVRQ6SULQJ [Little Rock, Ark: August House, 2003], ² 6LQFHPRVWRIWKH6HFRQG&RORUHG·VÀJKWLQJRFFXUUHG in Arkansas, however, it is unclear how Private Green found his way to parade grounds adjacent to Washington Navy Yard, where /LQFROQ arranges his meeting with the president. Abraham Lincoln seems more appreciative than appalled by Green’s report, and the scene moves on to another African American soldier, Ira Clark from Massachusetts, who complains to Lincoln about black soldiers’ lower wages DQGWKHODFNRIEODFNRIÀFHUV*UHHQVHHPVXQFRPIRUWDEOHZLWK&ODUN·VFRPSODLQLQJWRWKHSUHVLGHQWKLPVHOIEXWLWLV
    [Show full text]
  • Transcript of King Denslow of Oz
    1 You’re listening to Suspension of Disbelief. I’m Eric Molinsky. When I was a kid, I was not a big fan of the Wizard of Oz. I recognized that the performers were amazing -- but the movie always felt kind of stagey. I could still see the seams on the costumes. And I felt like the camera was just about to catch a microphone hanging above the actors. Now ten years ago, I came across the original book from 1900 -- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz written by L. Frank Baum. The story is, you know, just like the movie – but the illustrations were SO charming. The shapes of the characters were really funny with big heads and little bodies. They were drawn with bold strokes. The expressions on the Tin Man and the Scarecrow were just as human as Ray Bolger and Jack Haley, but the characters really look like they’re made of straw and tin. Dorothy is like this scrappy 6 year old, who really looks like she’s from a farm. And the Lion was a LION like a big lion but he’s wearing spectacles and he’s got a little bow in his hair! The artist was William Wallace Denslow or W.W. Denslow. I had never heard of him. MPH: Had he illustrated more classics, we probably would know more of his books. But other than The Wizard of Oz, he’s pretty much forgotten. That’s Michael Patrick Hearn. He wrote biographies on L. Frank Baum and W.W. Denslow. And the story of their collaboration is completely fascinating.
    [Show full text]
  • Lyman Frank Baum Was Born in Chittenango, New York in 1856
    good john © good john © good john © good john © good john © john © good good john © john © good good good john good john © john good © © john good good © john good good good © john john good good © john © john good good © john © john good © john good © john good yman Frank Baum was born in Chittenango, butL then, a year after his father’s death in 1887, it was discovered that© a clerk had embezzled most of the Newcapital York in thein 1856, family’s into oil a childhoodcompany. Inof 1891 Baum took his wife and fourindulgent young sons luxury. to Chicago, He tried leaving several two professions failed enterprises behind in South– Dakota.actor, playwright, In 1896 he theatre completed manager, the newspaper good manuscripts of his first two children’sreporter, books. salesman Now in – hissecure early in forties, the knowledge that his © john Baum decided to earn his living asfather’s a writer. money would support him. He married in 1882 newspaperThe Wonderful cartoonist Wizard William of OzWallace was published Denslow. inThe 1900 story and was illustrated inspired by by Baum’s own love of Grimms’ Fairy Tales and by a wish to give his sons “a modernisedgood fairy tale, in which the wonderment and joy are retained and the heartaches and nightmares left out”. One of his sons john said the name of Oz came to his father when he was asked where his characters lived. Baum’s eye fell on the drawer of a filing cabinet which good © stored papers alphabetically O-Z and ‘Oz’ was born. Great Oz,The The earliest Emerald title City, for theFrom book Kansas was toThe Fairyland, City of Oz The, then Fairyland The City of of the johnOz, The Land of Oz and, finally, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
    [Show full text]
  • Real, Truly Live Places: Notes Toward the Queer Uncanny
    REAL, TRULY LIVE PLACES: NOTES TOWARD THE QUEER UNCANNY By Copyright 2011 Milton W. Wendland Submitted to the graduate degree program in American Studies and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ________________________________ Chairperson: Dr. Ann Schofield ________________________________ Chairperson: Dr. Kathryn Conrad ________________________________ Dr. Doreen Fowler ________________________________ Dr. L. Ayu Saraswati ________________________________ Dr. Adrianne Kunkel Date Defended: July 18, 2011 The Dissertation Committee for Milton W. Wendland certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: REAL, TRULY LIVE PLACES: NOTES TOWARD THE QUEER UNCANNY ________________________________ Chairperson: Dr. Ann Schofield ________________________________ Chairperson: Dr. Kathryn Conrad Date approved: July 18, 2011 ii Abstract This dissertation problematizes contemporary ideas of epistemological dependability and advances queer theory’s critique of heteronormativity by reading the psychoanalytic concept of the uncanny in conjunction with the critical concept of the queer to produce the queer uncanny. The first chapter analyzes the The Wizard of Oz (1939) and introduces the disruptive interpretive potential of the queer uncanny in several of its manifestations: the compulsion to repeat, doubling, and dislogic. The second chapter focuses on the novel Mysterious Skin (Scott Heim) and of redemption in light of childhood sexual molestation, demonstrates the ability of the queer uncanny to broaden available interpretative ranges vis-à- vis cultural discourses surrounding traumatic events like child sexual abuse. The final chapter applies the lens of the queer uncanny to a municipal domestic partnership registry ordinance that by its own terms provides no rights to registrants but which upon further analysis turns out to offer evidence of the performative potential of the queer uncanny.
    [Show full text]
  • W. W. Denslow Drawings 1903BASC 13
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8h70nvn No online items Finding Aid to the W. W. Denslow Drawings 1903BASC 13 Finding aid prepared by Susanne Mari Sakai Book Arts & Special Collections February 2020 100 Larkin Street San Francisco 94102 [email protected] URL: http://sfpl.org/index.php?pg=0200000201 Finding Aid to the W. W. Denslow BASC 13 1 Drawings 1903BASC 13 Title: W. W. Denslow Drawings Date: 1903 Identifier/Call Number: BASC 13 Creator: Denslow, W. W., 1856-1915 Physical Description: 2 oversize flat boxes(2 linear feet) Contributing Institution: Book Arts & Special Collections Abstract: The collection consists of original artwork by W. W. Denslow for Denslow's House That Jack Built, Denslow's Little Red Riding Hood, and Denslow's Three Bears, all part of the Denslow's Picture Books for Children series published by G.W. Dillingham Co. in 1903. Collection is stored on site. Language of Materials: Collection materials are in English. Conditions Governing Access Collection is open for research and is available for use during Book Arts & Special Collections hours. Publication Rights Copyright has not been assigned to the San Francisco Public Library. All requests for permission to publish or quote from materials must be submitted in writing to Book Arts & Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the San Francisco Public Library as the owner of the physical items. Preferred Citation [Identification of item/Title of folder], W. W. Denslow Drawings (BASC 13), Book Arts & Special Collections, San Francisco Public Library. Provenance Transferred from the San Francisco Public Library's Children's Department in 1993.
    [Show full text]
  • L. Frank Baum's Cardiac Disease
    L. Frank Baum’s cardiac disease Inset in image of narrowed coronary arteries (CORBIS), Lyman Frank Baum, author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Getty Images. Robert S. Pinals, MD, and Harold Smulyan, MD Dr. Pinals (AΩA, University of Rochester, 1955) is clinical after a life of repeated failures in several occupations, to find professor of Medicine at the University of Medicine and his true calling. Dentistry of New Jersey—Robert Wood Johnson School of Baum was born in 1856 in Chittenango, a small town in Medicine, New Brunswick, New Jersey. Dr. Smulyan (AΩA, upstate New York. His father, a barrel maker, moved to nearby University of Buffalo, 1953) is professor of Medicine in the Syracuse in 1861, and, after several successful business ven- Cardiology Division of State University of New York Upstate tures, purchased a splendid farm just north of the city. Nearby Medical University in Syracuse, New York. was the Plank Road, a toll road farmers used to bring their produce to market downtown. Worn planks were constantly he legendary author of the Oz stories, L. Frank Baum, being replaced by a Tin Woodman (or “Tin Man”), the basis succumbed to congestive heart failure in 1919 at age for the character that would reappear in Baum’s fiction years sixty-two.1–4 He died almost twenty years after pub- later. Young Frank was a frail, sensitive child, less physically Tlication of his first successful novel, The Wonderful Wizard active than other children ostensibly because of a defective of Oz, which has remained enormously popular in print, on heart.* He had “heart attacks” manifested by syncope, often stage, and in the movies.5 Baum subsequently wrote thirteen Oz novels, the last, Glinda of Oz, literally on his deathbed.
    [Show full text]
  • Incarnations of the Wizard of Oz and the Negotiation of Identity, Race, and Gender, in Popular Culture Carly A
    Florida International University FIU Digital Commons FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations University Graduate School 7-13-2012 An American Tale: Incarnations of the Wizard of Oz and the Negotiation of Identity, Race, and Gender, in Popular Culture Carly A. Orshan Florida International University, [email protected] DOI: 10.25148/etd.FI12080634 Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Orshan, Carly A., "An American Tale: Incarnations of the Wizard of Oz and the Negotiation of Identity, Race, and Gender, in Popular Culture" (2012). FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 676. https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/676 This work is brought to you for free and open access by the University Graduate School at FIU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of FIU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY Miami, Florida AN AMERICAN TALE: INCARNATIONS OF THE WIZARD OF OZ AND THE NEGOTIATION OF IDENTITY, RACE, AND GENDER, IN POPULAR CULTURE A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in ENGLISH by Carly A. Orshan 2012 To: Dean Kenneth Furton College of Arts and Sciences This thesis, written by Carly A. Orshan, and entitled An American Tale: Incarnations of the Wizard of Oz and the Negotiation of Identity, Race, and Gender, in Popular Culture, having been approved in respect to style and intellectual content, is referred to you for judgment. We have read this thesis and recommend that it be approved.
    [Show full text]
  • The Baum Bugle
    Fourth Draft Three Column Version August 15, 2002 The Baum Bugle The Journal of the International Wizard of Oz Club Index for Volumes 1-45 1957-2001 Volumes 1 through 31: Frederick E. Otto Volumes 32 through 45: Richard R. Rutter Dedications The Baum Bugle’s editors for giving Oz fans insights into the wonderful world of Oz. Fred E. Otto [1927-95] for launching the indexing project. Peter E. Hanff for his assistance and encouragement during the creation of this third edition of The Baum Bugle Index (1957-2001). Fred M. Meyer, my mentor during more than a quarter century in Oz. Introduction Founded in 1957 by Justin G. Schiller, The International Wizard of Oz Club brings together thousands of diverse individuals interested in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and this classic’s author, L. Frank Baum. The forty-four volumes of The Baum Bugle to-date play an important rôle for the club and its members. Despite the general excellence of the journal, the lack of annual or cumulative indices, was soon recognized as a hindrance by those pursuing research related to The Wizard of Oz. The late Fred E. Otto (1925-1994) accepted the challenge of creating a Bugle index proposed by Jerry Tobias. With the assistance of Patrick Maund, Peter E. Hanff, and Karin Eads, Fred completed a first edition which included volumes 1 through 28 (1957-1984). A much improved second edition, embracing all issues through 1988, was published by Fred Otto with the assistance of Douglas G. Greene, Patrick Maund, Gregory McKean, and Peter E.
    [Show full text]
  • DAMMIT, TOTO, WE're STILL in KANSAS: the FALLACY of FEMINIST EVOLUTION in a MODERN AMERICAN FAIRY TALE by Beth Boswell a Diss
    DAMMIT, TOTO, WE’RE STILL IN KANSAS: THE FALLACY OF FEMINIST EVOLUTION IN A MODERN AMERICAN FAIRY TALE by Beth Boswell A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Middle Tennessee State University May 2018 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Martha Hixon, Director Dr. Will Brantley Dr. Jane Marcellus This dissertation is dedicated, in loving memory, to two dearly departed souls: to Dr. David L. Lavery, the first director of this project and a constant voice of encouragement in my studies, whose absence will never be wholly realized because of the thousands of lives he touched with his spirit, enthusiasm, and scholarship. I am eternally grateful for our time together. And to my beautiful grandmother, Fay M. Rhodes, who first introduced me to the yellow brick road and took me on her back to a pear-tree Emerald City one hundred times or more. I miss you more than Dorothy missed Kansas. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This dissertation would not have been possible without the educators who have pushed me to challenge myself, to question everything in the world around me, and to be unashamed to explore what I “thought” I already knew, over and over again. Though there are too many to list by name, know that I am forever grateful for your encouragement and dedication to learning, whether in the classroom or the world. I would like to thank my phenomenal committee for their tireless support and assistance in this project. I am especially grateful for Dr. Martha Hixon, who stepped in as my director after the passing of Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Trauma, Creativity, and Unconscious Confessions: the Lost Childhood History Behind L
    TRAUMA, CREATIVITY, AND UNCONSCIOUS CONFESSIONS: THE LOST CHILDHOOD HISTORY BEHIND L. FRANK BAUM‘S THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ REGINALD LEAMON ROBINSON* I. INTRODUCTION ―[P]oisonous pedagogy‖ breeds overly well-adjusted individuals who can only trust the mask they have been forced to wear because as children they lived in constant fear of punishment. – Alice Miller The Body Never Lies: The Lingering Effects of Hurtful Parenting1 Born in 1856 and raised by devout Methodists, Lyman Frank Baum was beaten, manipulated, and ―murdered.‖ Perhaps not seen as a creative, imaginative child but as an idle and perhaps unmanly one, Frank‘s parents, Benjamin Baum and Cynthia Baum, would have been determined to make him morally upright, socially productive, and not a slight, limp-wristed dandy. To garner this outcome, Benjamin may have had to be a stern, self- absorbed, and imposing figure,2 especially given that his father, John, was a circuit riding Methodist minister, who likely preached about the dangers of the devil and lack of inner moral discipline.3 As such, John Baum would * Copyright © 2010 by Reginald Leamon Robinson. Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law, Washington, D.C. B.A., (Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude), Howard University (1981); M.A., Political Science, The University of Chicago (1983); Exchange Scholar, Political Science and Economic, Yale University (1984–1985); J.D., The University of Pennsylvania (1989). I would like to thank Dean Kurt Schmoke for his support and comments. I would also like to thank Professor Anthony Farley for organizing the ―Taking Oz Seriously‖ symposium, which was hosted wonderfully by the Albany Law School.
    [Show full text]