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... Battle of the Atlantic, 1939-1943 by Richard Woodman John Murray £30 pp781 Multiple Display Advertising Items ... art Scepter'd isles Cats on a hot tin roof Pick of the day Best comedy A ...
2004 - Gale Group | Sunday Times HA GDA
... the New York Public Library, discovering nothing about Oz of the kind I feared; more oddly, since Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman and the Cowardly Lion were apparently firmly fixed in American public imagination, almost nothing in print about their creator. Of the few brief adult Oz-appreciations then extant, the best and longest—itself ...
Tópico(s): Themes in Literature Analysis
1976 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Children's literature
... supply, they will evolve to a higher level of sophistication, intelligence, and social involvement. Aunt Em brings her American prejudice against mosquitoes to Oz, but the Tin Woodman ensures her that such fears are now misguided: “We have some very large mosquitoes here, which sing as beautifully as song birds,” replied the Tin Woodman. “But they never bite or annoy our people, because they are well fed and taken care of. The reason they bite people in your country is because they are hungry—poor things!” “Yes,” agreed Aunt Em; “they’re hungry, all right. An’ they ain’t very particular who they feed on. I’m glad you’ve got the ’skeeters educated in Oz.” (ECO 305) In this ideal example of the ...
Tópico(s): Culinary Culture and Tourism
2008 - Johns Hopkins University Press | The Lion and the unicorn
... curriculum and instruction. DO YOU remember The Wizard of Oz? The wonderful wizard who could do everything? At least that's what Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman, and the Cowardly Lion believed. The Scarecrow wanted ...
Tópico(s): Education and Technology Integration
2000 - SAGE Publishing | Phi Delta Kappan
... of Sir Thomas More, and the virtual elimination of death or disease. The Tin Woodman, for example, declares in The Road to Oz, We have no rich, and no poor; for ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Education Studies and Reforms
1998 - Penn State University Press | Utopian Studies
In The Wonderful Wizard of Oz , L. Frank Baum tackles social constructions of disability through a variety of means. First and foremost, the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and Cowardly Lion are searching for the brain, heart, and courage they believe they are missing, and the Wizard offers them ...
Tópico(s): Utopian, Dystopian, and Speculative Fiction
2013 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Children's Literature Association quarterly
... popular stage musical influenced silent film depictions of Oz, including a multimedia show (1908), a one-reel short produced by Selig Studios (1910) and a full-length feature film (1925) that portrayed Dorothy as a flirtatious flapper and co-starred Oliver Hardy as Tin Woodman. Comprehensive examinations of each production provide behind-the-scenes information, including: battles over legal rights to ...
Tópico(s): Shakespeare, Adaptation, and Literary Criticism
2001 - Association of College and Research Libraries | Choice Reviews Online
R. Duncan M. Pelly, David M. Bøje,
... the power dynamics of Dorothy, the Strawman, the Tin Woodman, and the Lion vis a vis the more powerful characters in Oz: The Wizard of Oz, and the Witches of the North, East, ...
Tópico(s): Psychology
2021 - Academy of Management | Academy of Management Proceedings
... golden) Road and Oz = (Ounce) is ubiquitous. The Woodman, under a witch's spell, chopped off a different part of his body every time he swung his axe. In Oz, these parts could be replaced with tin. Here, Baum is giving his Populist view of evil Northeastern influences on honest labor. The Populist view dehumanized the simple laborer so that ...
Tópico(s): Themes in Literature Analysis
1986 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Perspectives in biology and medicine
Pugh,
... too do Neill’s illustrations of Baum’s Oz capture its transgressive and marvelous aspects. Most of Neill’s drawings faithfully depict, without any hints of erotic undertones, the fantastic quests of Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman, and Baum’s numerous other adventurers, yet other ... the close friendship between the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman, which Baum describes as a long-term relationship resembling a marriage, with visual double entendre suggesting the erotic aspects of their union. After Baum’s death, Neill wrote four books in the Oz series, adhering to Baum’s queer legacy, both ...
Tópico(s): Digital Games and Media
2015 - Wayne State University Press | Marvels & Tales
... motley team of traveling companions set out to Oz, each with a personal agenda, seeking fulfillment through the power of one perceived as greater than they. The scarecrow wanted brains, the tin woodman a heart, the lion courage, and Dorothy just ...
Tópico(s): Media, Gender, and Advertising
2005 - Elsevier BV | Journal of the American College of Radiology
... heterosexuality harder to sustain. Examining the problematic nature of heterosexuality in children’s literature points Pugh to otherwise overlooked moments or texts that offer opportunities for wonderful analysis. In chapter one, on Baum’s Oz books, Pugh discusses the hysterical rivalry between the Tin Woodman and Captain Fyter, the tin soldier who follows the Woodman as Nimmie Amee’s lover. Neither tin man really wants to be with Nimmie, so she settles for the meat man Chopfyt, who has been made by magically gluing together the severed body parts of her two former lovers before they became tin. ...
Tópico(s): Themes in Literature Analysis
2012 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Children's Literature Association quarterly
... want people to call him a fool. The Tin Woodman needs a heart so that he can love and be happy once again. The Lion longs for courage to be brave and not a bully; at one point, Dorothy tells him, “You are nothing but a big coward.” They meet the Wizard of Oz, who tells them that he wants proof that ... girl would end my wicked deeds.” Returning to Oz, the wishes of Dorothy and her three friends are granted with the help of the Wizard, who is really just a very good “common” man disguised as the Grand Wizard, and the Good Witch, Glinda. In the end, the scarecrow gets a brain, the tin woodman gets the heart he has yearned for, the ...
Tópico(s): School Health and Nursing Education
2004 - Elsevier BV | Journal of Pediatric Health Care
... want people to call him a fool. The Tin Woodman needs a heart so that he can love and be happy once again. The Lion longs for courage to be brave and not a bully; at one point, Dorothy tells him, “You are nothing but a big coward.” They meet the Wizard of Oz, who tells them that he wants proof that ... girl would end my wicked deeds.” Returning to Oz, the wishes of Dorothy and her three friends are granted with the help of the Wizard, who is really just a very good “common” man disguised as the Grand Wizard, and the Good Witch, Glinda. In the end, the scarecrow gets a brain, the tin woodman gets the heart he has yearned for, the ...
Tópico(s): School Health and Nursing Education
2004 - Elsevier BV | Journal of Pediatric Health Care
... familiar faces of Dorothy, the Scarecrow, and the Tin Woodman (2371).Here, the beloved characters are moving from ...
Tópico(s): Digital Games and Media
2018 - Queensland University of Technology | M/C Journal
... performed comic routines. Still, Baum's Scarecrow and Tin Woodman, portrayed by Fred Stone and David Montgomery, were ...
Tópico(s): Shakespeare, Adaptation, and Literary Criticism
2005 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Children's Literature Association quarterly
... had such success in creating the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman in The Wizard of Ozthat he kept having ...
1980 - Johns Hopkins University Press | Children's literature