For more than a century, The Wizard of Oz has been presented as a harmless children’s story—a fantasy of colour, courage, and homecoming. Its repeated retelling has rendered it familiar, comforting, and largely unquestioned. Generations have grown up with its images and phrases, encountering it early and revisiting it often.
This book takes that familiarity as its starting point rather than its conclusion.
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.”
Particular attention is given to how exposure functions in the story. The Wizard is revealed, the spectacle collapses, and yet the system remains intact. Resolution is delivered not through transformation, but through reassurance. Experience is acknowledged, then neutralised. Memory persists, but consequence dissolves.
From the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City, from the enforced spectacles to the curtain itself, the analysis proceeds step by step. The book then follows the story’s logic beyond Oz, examining why similar arrangements remain familiar in modern contexts. Education systems, courts, banks, corporations, bureaucracies, and media environments are discussed not as conspiracies, but as ordinary institutions shaped by efficiency, abstraction, procedure, and continuity.
Throughout, the emphasis remains descriptive rather than prescriptive. No solutions are proposed. No call to action is issued. The book does not argue that understanding leads to reform, nor that clarity produces change. It distinguishes function from intention and observation from advocacy.
Instead, it offers a way of looking.
The final sections explore what it means to see without enforced lenses—how discernment differs from rebellion, why truth often appears quietly rather than dramatically, and why systems that are widely recognised nevertheless continue to operate. The analysis closes not with instruction, but with orientation.
For readers interested in cultural analysis, media literacy, and the mechanics of modern authority, this book provides a careful examination of why The Wizard of Oz still works—and why, once its structure is recognised, its logic is difficult to unsee.
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Librería: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Estados Unidos de America
Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. For more than a century, The Wizard of Oz has been presented as a harmless children's story-a fantasy of colour, courage, and homecoming. Its repeated retelling has rendered it familiar, comforting, and largely unquestioned. Generations have grown up with its images and phrases, encountering it early and revisiting it often.This book takes that familiarity as its starting point rather than its conclusion.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."Particular attention is given to how exposure functions in the story. The Wizard is revealed, the spectacle collapses, and yet the system remains intact. Resolution is delivered not through transformation, but through reassurance. Experience is acknowledged, then neutralised. Memory persists, but consequence dissolves.From the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City, from the enforced spectacles to the curtain itself, the analysis proceeds step by step. The book then follows the story's logic beyond Oz, examining why similar arrangements remain familiar in modern contexts. Education systems, courts, banks, corporations, bureaucracies, and media environments are discussed not as conspiracies, but as ordinary institutions shaped by efficiency, abstraction, procedure, and continuity.Throughout, the emphasis remains descriptive rather than prescriptive. No solutions are proposed. No call to action is issued. The book does not argue that understanding leads to reform, nor that clarity produces change. It distinguishes function from intention and observation from advocacy.Instead, it offers a way of looking. The final sections explore what it means to see without enforced lenses-how discernment differs from rebellion, why truth often appears quietly rather than dramatically, and why systems that are widely recognised nevertheless continue to operate. The analysis closes not with instruction, but with orientation.For readers interested in cultural analysis, media literacy, and the mechanics of modern authority, this book provides a careful examination of why The Wizard of Oz still works-and why, once its structure is recognised, its logic is difficult to unsee. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Nº de ref. del artículo: 9798278836827
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Librería: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, Estados Unidos de America
PAP. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000. Nº de ref. del artículo: L0-9798278836827
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Librería: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Reino Unido
PAP. Condición: New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000. Nº de ref. del artículo: L0-9798278836827
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Librería: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Reino Unido
Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. For more than a century, The Wizard of Oz has been presented as a harmless children's story-a fantasy of colour, courage, and homecoming. Its repeated retelling has rendered it familiar, comforting, and largely unquestioned. Generations have grown up with its images and phrases, encountering it early and revisiting it often.This book takes that familiarity as its starting point rather than its conclusion.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."Particular attention is given to how exposure functions in the story. The Wizard is revealed, the spectacle collapses, and yet the system remains intact. Resolution is delivered not through transformation, but through reassurance. Experience is acknowledged, then neutralised. Memory persists, but consequence dissolves.From the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City, from the enforced spectacles to the curtain itself, the analysis proceeds step by step. The book then follows the story's logic beyond Oz, examining why similar arrangements remain familiar in modern contexts. Education systems, courts, banks, corporations, bureaucracies, and media environments are discussed not as conspiracies, but as ordinary institutions shaped by efficiency, abstraction, procedure, and continuity.Throughout, the emphasis remains descriptive rather than prescriptive. No solutions are proposed. No call to action is issued. The book does not argue that understanding leads to reform, nor that clarity produces change. It distinguishes function from intention and observation from advocacy.Instead, it offers a way of looking. The final sections explore what it means to see without enforced lenses-how discernment differs from rebellion, why truth often appears quietly rather than dramatically, and why systems that are widely recognised nevertheless continue to operate. The analysis closes not with instruction, but with orientation.For readers interested in cultural analysis, media literacy, and the mechanics of modern authority, this book provides a careful examination of why The Wizard of Oz still works-and why, once its structure is recognised, its logic is difficult to unsee. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Nº de ref. del artículo: 9798278836827
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles