Skip to main content

Books @50: Dr. Seuss Warned Us in 1971, But We Didn't Listen to the Lorax

 


Call it fate or an unfortunate coincidence that Dr. Seuss' The Lorax celebrates its 50th anniversary the same week the United Nations releases an urgent report on the dire consequences of human-induced climate change. The conflict between the industrious, polluting Once-ler and the feisty Lorax, who "speaks for the trees," feels more prescient than ever.

"Once-ler!" he cried with a cruffulous croak. 
"Once-ler! You're making such smogulous smoke! 
My poor Swomee-Swans...why, they can't sing a note! 
No one can sing who has smog in his throat.

"He wanted a book that captured the effects of pollution on ecosystems and I would say it was really ahead of its time," says anthropologist and evolutionary biologist Nathaniel Dominy, who teaches at Dartmouth.

To keep reading this article, click here.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Classic Rock Tale of Music and Marijuana

  Ever since the dawn of man, humans have been looking for ways to make themselves feel better. Going beyond food, shelter and clothing…humans enjoy feeling good. Music, perhaps beating on a log with a stick, has long been one of the methods of soothing the savage beast. Another soothing method, of course, has been drugs in their many forms. Hundreds of songs about alcohol and marijuana, “hootch” and “grass,” respectively, have been written. The song “Feelin’ Good,” recorded by Ry Cooder, has the lyric “Feelin’ good, feelin’ good…all the money in the world spent on feeling good.” That about sums it up, no? To keep reading this article, click here.

Norman Lear Looks Back at 'All in the Family'

  It would seem unthinkable by today's standards: the most popular character on television was a blue-collar bigot from Queens, New York — who, despite his prejudices, was often considered lovable at the same time. But that was the case for much of the 1970s with the character Archie Bunker on  All in the Family , which debuted in 1971. For five years, it was the most-watched show on television. The show was groundbreaking for openly talking about serious issues of the day. While other shows featured surface-level plots,  All in the Family 's storylines often involved deeper discussions of racism, women's rights, the Vietnam War, homosexuality, rape and more. To keep reading this article, click here.

'West Side Story ' Shocked Audiences When It First Came too Broadway

  The Broadway show ran for 732 performances. The first film adaptation won 10 Academy Awards. And the fictional love story between a former gang member and the sister of a rival gang’s leader spawned more than a dozen revivals and tours. Now Jerome Robbins’s beloved musical,  “West Side Story,” is on theater screens  once again. The new film, directed by Steven Spielberg, premiered Friday. Often ranked   among the best musicals of all time, “West Side Story” was much less vaunted when it debuted on Broadway in 1957. Audiences and critics were discomfited by the violence and juvenile delinquency portrayed in the show, an adaptation of “Romeo and Juliet” that trades rival families for warring street gangs — one Puerto Rican and the other White. “The radioactive fallout from ‘West Side Story’ must still be descending on Broadway this morning,” critic Walter Kerr  wrote in the New York Herald Tribune . Theatergoers were flummoxed that the show not only lacked the f...