Are The Wizard of Oz and A Modest Proposal really what they seem? Or do they have a deeper meaning? This essay will go over the different types of Oz beliefs and also compare them to that of A Modest Proposal.
The Wizard of Oz is a film created by L. Frank Baum. In this flick, Dorothy and her dog Toto are caught in a tornado and somehow whisked away to the Land of Oz. There, the meets some noticeable friends and foes on her journey to meet the Wizard of Oz who everyone says can take her back home. Whilst the film was a captivating tale about a girl in a foreign place, The Wizard of Oz has a deeper meaning. There are many ideas to what the meaning, but they all have a similar basis. …show more content…
A popular belief is that the Wizard of Oz was an allegory on Populism and American Monetary Policy. Populism is a movement that champions the common person, usually by contrasting the, to the elite. Many people see The Wizard of Oz as being about the fall of the Populist Movement in the United States during the end of the twentieth century. In this idea, Dorothy is represented as the common man or woman, the Scarecrow represents the farmers, the Tin Man is an industrial worker, and the Cowardly Lion is a politician name William Bryan who was seen by many people as an all talk and no action man. They make their journey across the Yellow Brick Road (which according to this belief referred to the gold standard) to see the Wonderful Wizard, who resembled President Grover Cleveland. The word “Oz” is actually the abbreviation for ounce which is the standard for measuring gold. The green of the Emerald City represents the American dollar. And finally, The Wicked Witch of the East represents the bankers, and the Wicked …show more content…
Some people believe that it shows how the minority religion bullies the majority religion in Ireland. How would minority gain dominance over a more majority religion one ask? Well it is quite simple. The minority religion was the Protestants. They were the landowners and social elites of Ireland, and they gave out land to the lower class Irish farmers. They also forced them to pay harsh homage taxes to them. This is why people think that Swift, the author, was trying to emphasize when he said that the farmers of Ireland should give their children for the Protestant to eat. According to these people, what he was really saying that the Protestant elites were purposely abusing their power, taking everything the regular Catholics had, and leaving the Catholics with