Dr. Seuss: American Icon
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Product Description
Published in time for the centenary of Seuss's birth in March 2004, Dr. Seuss: American Icon, celebrates one of the most influential authors and artists of the 20th century: Theodor Seuss Geisel, best known as 'Dr. Seuss'. Dr Seuss's ascendance from children's author to American icon confirms that his cultural significance rests not just with the beginning reader, but with the scholar, the artist, and the poet. Seuss's Beginner Books(starting with The Cat in the Hat in 1957) have obscured the enormous range of his contributions to American literature. Similarly his art, unfairly overlooked because it appears in children's books, cartoons, and commercials, actually covers a range of styles, including Surrealism, Art Nouveau, and Cubism. Bringing to light the adult perspective behind the children's writer, Philip Nel examines Seuss's lesser-known works, such as the 'adult book' The Seven Lady Godivas (1939), and the live-action musical The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953). The book also features the most comprehensive Seuss bibliography ever produced, documenting his prodigious output. As well as establishing Seuss's place among poets and artists, Dr. Seuss: American Icon links the Seuss people know and the Seuss people do not know.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1084014 in Books
- Published on: 2003-12-01
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .1 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 320 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
He claimed that he used nonsense to "awaken the brain cells," and his work, whether the political cartoons that began his career, or the children's books for which he is most famous, provides ample evidence of his ability to keep readers on their toes. Timed to coincide with the one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of "The U.S. Laureate of Nonsense," this abundantly documented critical study investigates not only Dr. Seuss' quirky art and inventive language but also how his inspired goofiness entered the mainstream of American culture. Nel eschews all but the most necessary details of Dr. Seuss' personal life, but, using numerous, specific examples of his writing and art, digs deeply into the work, including a particularly intriguing discussion of Dr. Seuss' pre- and post-World War II politics. With extensive documentation and a bibliography of nearly 100 pages, this isn't for the renowned doctor's casual fans. But even nonacademics will come away enlightened about the talented man who wanted to wake people up to events in the world and leave a moral legacy for children. Stephanie Zvirin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"By his own admission, Nel offers a text that is somewhat schematic, he dedicates each chapter to a different aspect of Geisel's work and uses a different theoretical approach: on poetry, he uses formalism; on politics, historicism; on marketing, cultural studies; and so on. Such varying thematic interpretations reveal Nel's remarkable extensive research, which reaches from Geisel's political cartoons to his decisions about copyright and trademark to protect his own creations. Nel offers astute analyses of both racism and sexism in Geisel's work, and one particularly interesting chapter outlines the intertextual borrowings and influences from Geisel's work. All this is richly illustrate with more than 30 reproductions. The invaluable 70-page annotated bibliography lists both primary works and secondary sources - films, books, interviews, reviews, and Web sites. Essential." - Choice, 9/04 (E.R. Baer )
"Like The Cat in the Hat, which can be enjoyed by both parents and children, lay people and scholars, Nel's book neither forgets nor talks down to its audience. A fine example of scholarship, Dr. Seuss: American Icon will be equally at home on the researcher's bookshelf or the Seuss fan's coffee table. Well-written, well-argued, and well-conceived, Nel's good-humored book teaches a lesson of which Dr. Seuss would approve: good scholarship, like good literature, can be both rich and accessible. It's a lesson from which we might all learn." -Humor: International Journal of Humor Research, 17-4, 2004
"Dr. Seuss: American Icon provides the reader a memorably excellent survey of Dr. Seuss' many achievements." -Library Bookwatch, November 2004
"Because Nel frames his discussion within contemporary criticism, his analysis is more important to children's literature scholars in the academy.he sprinkles the scholarly publications of other throughout his text, thus supporting his conclusions. His text is richly embedded with the earlier research of children's literature scholars and ties into cultural aesthetics and children's literature.environmental ideal, and his markers of political protest in his images is most valuable.they will have an important impact on further discussions of Dr. Seuss cartoonist, satirist, consumer magnate, and instigator of twenty-first-century aesthetics in American children's culture." -The Lion and the Unicorn, 1/05
"Dr. Seuss: American Icon is consistently lively, engaging, and impeccably researched. Its seventy-two-page annotated bibliography alone will prove indispensable to future Seuss researchers and useful for students and scholars of twentieth-century American children's literature and culture" -Children's Literature 33, 2005
mention (Children's Literature Association Quarterly )
About the Author
Philip Nel is Assistant Professor of English at Kansas State University. He is the author of JK Rowling's Harry Potter Novels: A Reader's Guide (2001) - and The Avant-Garde and American Postmodernity (2002). He is currently writing a biography of Crockett Johnson and Ruth Krauss.
