1. Behind the Curtain
I don’t remember exactly when or how it was that I first learned that L. Frank Baum, author of the Oz series of books, had called for the murder of all Native American people. But I do remember the information both shocked me and, in some ways, did not shock me at all. I had been doing research into colonialism and Indigenous history for a little while – mostly focusing on Canada, but including the rest of the Americas as well – and had become sadly used to encountering horrifying material.
Baum is not circumspect in his opinions about Indians, which he expressed just twice in editorials written for The Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer . In the December 20, 1890, edition he declared: “The Whites, by law of conquest, by justice of civilization, are masters of the American continent, and the best safety of the frontier settlements will be secured by the total annihilation of the few remaining Indians.” Just over a week later, on December 29, the U.S. Calvary killed hundreds of Sioux at Wounded Knee. In direct response to the massacre, on January 3 Baum wrote: “The Pioneer has before declared that our only safety depends upon the total extirmination [sic] of the Indians. Having wronged them for centuries we had better, in order to protect our civilization, follow it up by one more wrong and wipe these untamed and untamable creatures from the face of the earth.”
Among folks doing Indigenous studies Baum’s editorials are well known, so there never seemed much reason for me to write about them. At least that was the case until a friend of mine, Michael Ostling, invited me and three others to participate in a panel using The Wizard of Oz as a jumping off point to talk about issues related to the academic study of religion. That may seem like an odd idea, but it was based to some extent on two key points: 1) “religion” is a notoriously slippery term, and as a result it’s possible to link it to just about anything; 2) the machinations of the Wizard have been previously used by scholars as a metaphor for some aspects of religious activity. Russell McCutcheon, for instance, states:
In attempting to manufacture an unassailable safe haven for the storage of social charters and “worlds,” mythmakers, tellers and performers draw on a complex network of disguised assumptions, depending on their listeners not to ask certain sorts of questions, not to speak out of turn, to listen respectfully, applaud when prompted, and, in those famous lines from The Wizard of Oz, to “pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.” (207)
The curtain metaphor applies very differently however to work by Sam Gill on a particular Indigenous ritual, the rite of passage ceremony for young Wiradjuri males in eastern Australia. In this ritual the older men at first fool the boys into thinking that a powerful spirit being is present among them, but then actually reveal their own trickery – much like if the Wizard himself had pulled aside the curtain, rather than Toto. In this way (according to Gill) the men induce in the boys “a disenchantment with a naive view of reality, that is, with the view that things are what they appear to be” (81). In other words the ritual helps to foster an understanding of religion, and life, that is complex and nuanced, that moves beyond the theatrics of smoke and thunder.
Source: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/232498399487979240/
All of which is to say that in many ways the stage had been set for some time now for a more detailed consideration of The Wizard of Oz and how scholars think about religion. In the end, the five of us presented our different takes on at the 2012 annual meeting of the North American Association for the Study of Religion. Four of us subsequently published versions of our papers in the Journal of Religion and Popular Culture in 2014, the 75th anniversary of The Wizard of Oz.
My own contribution to the panel centered on Baum’s editorials. Aside from studying Indigenous traditions, I have long been interested in conversations about religion and violence. One pattern in these conversations – the ones held both by academics and by regular humans – is that people tend to come to them having already decided what they think. Very simply: if you believe that religion is essentially “good” then you likely will make the case that “real” religion is not inherently violent (and so religion can be used as a kind of Ozian smokescreen to cover up the underlying motives of violence, but is never the “real” cause); and if you believe that religion is essentially “bad” then you likely are convinced, à la Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins, that it is in fact wholly responsible for a great deal of violence and suffering, and that the world would be much better off without it (religion in this view is the smokescreen, presenting itself as good and true and obscuring its underlying evil heart).
And so I wondered: did attitudes about Baum similarly impact scholars’ views of his work (or vice versa)? More specifically, were there connections between academic treatments of his genocide editorials and interpretations of both the first book in the Oz series, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and its 1939 movie adaptation? I wasn’t surprised to find that the answer seemed to be “yes.” (But while I was not surprised, I was [and am] still cautious: given that I’m looking at the ways in which people’s views of reality are shaped by their assumptions, it makes me itchy when my own assumptions appear to be borne out by the data I uncover.)
I am incredibly, unbelievably fortunate to have access to the University of Toronto library system, which seems to contain just about every book and article ever published on anything, ever. Which made it possible for me to read pretty much everything ever written on Baum, his work, and The Wizard of Oz. The first thing I noticed is that most scholars who write about this stuff do not mention Baum’s genocide editorials at all. The ones who do consistently fall into one of three categories:
- The majority see Baum’s work as very positive in various ways, and excuse the editorials (“he didn’t really mean them”; “you have to consider the context”; etc.).
- A few see Baum’s work as very negative in various ways, and accept the editorials more or less at face value (basically: “he was a genocidal racist”).
- A tiny minority see Baum and his work, including the editorials, as complicated and open to various, possibly contradictory, interpretations.
Anyone who’s interested can read the full account of my discoveries in excruciating detail in my article. Here, I thought I would just summarize some of the key ideas.
2. Baum is Good / Baum is Bad
The reasoning here is circular: Baum was a good guy, therefore the editorials clearly don’t show us who he “really” was, whereas his books reveal his innate positive qualities. There are three main points that scholars who like Baum and who also mention the genocide editorials tend to make about the initial Oz stories – both the 1899 book and the 1939 film:
- The stories are feminist: Dorothy is the hero/savior/protagonist. The most powerful characters in both Oz and Kansas are women (the good and wicked witches, Auntie Em, and Mrs. Gulch).
- The stories are anti-imperialist: The Wizard is revealed as both fraud and monster, sending a young girl and her friends on a suicide mission in order to protect his power. The more explicitly evil tyrants, the wicked witches, are destroyed and their people liberated.
- The stories celebrate diversity: Many different types of beings co-exist peacefully in Oz, a situation symbolized by the team of living scarecrow, mechanical man, anthropomorphic lion, human girl, and small dog. The only real inter-species problems are caused by the evil tyrants (e.g., the flying monkeys attack others because they are controlled by the witch).
These same three topics appear in the more negative readings of Baum, his first Oz book, and that book’s most famous movie adaptation:
- The stories are anti-feminist: The most powerful women in Oz who are in conflict with male authority (the Wizard) are the witches of the east and west, characterized as evil and deserving of assassination. Dorothy does not defeat these witches using her skills or intelligence, but by accident (using a house and a bucket of water). And the ending of the film makes it clear that the girl’s true “place” is at “home” – where she is now more than happy to do her domestic chores.
- The stories are pro-imperialist: The Wizard, in the end, is shown as kindly and avuncular; everyone seems to quickly forget that he tried to send Dorothy et al. to their deaths (!). Dorothy for her part is a helpful invader/colonist, who receives thanks and praise from the native inhabitants for her interference in their world (unlike the United States’ 2003 experience in Iraq, Dorothy is in fact greeted as a liberator upon her arrival in Oz).
- The stories are segregationist: Oz is (mostly) peaceful because its constituent “races” are kept separate from one another, each community in its own place (like Munchkinland). The diverse team of Dorothy and her new friends is the exception that proves the rule.
One of the more interesting examples of how assumptions about Baum impact interpretation of the Oz stories involves the poppy field. Batting for the pro-Baum side, Evan Schwartz in Finding Oz refers to the fact that, after WWI, poppy fields came to represent war victims: “The red color was said to come from the blood of the slain, serving as an emblem of commemoration” (190). Schwartz combines this perspective – which emerged of course after the original publication of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz – with his belief that Baum in fact disapproved of the genocide of Native Americans, and concludes that the poppy field in Oz “can be read as a powerful symbol of Frank’s – and America’s – sadness over the destruction of native cultures” (190).
Thomas St. John sees things differently. In the unambiguously titled “Indian-Hating in ‘The Wizard of Oz’”, St. John argues that various symbolic elements of the story reveal Baum’s generally racist perspective, and his particular desire to help bring about “the extermination of the American Indian.” The poppies in this reading are not about the war dead, but dangerous narcotics, associated with Native Americans through an impressively convoluted, if not entirely coherent, line of reasoning: “The Deadly Poppy Field is the innocent child’s first sight of opium, that anodyne of choice for pain in the nineteenth century, sold in patent medicines, in the Wizard Oil, at the travelling Indian medicine shows. Baum’s deadly poppies are the poison opium, causing sleep and the fatal dream.”
3. It’s Complicated
Essentially, folks who take the third approach to Baum and the Oz stories recognize that there are merits to many different interpretations, that whether or not Baum really meant what he wrote in those editorials his Oz stories are nevertheless ambiguous and complex, and lend themselves to a host of (often contradictory) understandings. Dorothy performs selfless, heroic acts and wants to go back to the farm. The Wizard is both murderously duplicitous and genuinely helpful. Oz is both diverse and segregated. The Witch of the West is both villain and victim.
Katherine Fowkes is one of the few commenters who not only recognizes the inherent impossibility of arriving at a definitive reading of The Wizard of Oz, but regards this impossibility as a selling point. In The Fantasy Film she suggests that “the popularity and staying power of Wizard and other classic films may lie precisely in their myth-like ability to juggle conflicting ideas and impulses, thereby providing the possibility of various and sometimes opposite interpretations” (61). Her point here reminds me of Chris Gavaler’s discussion of Cinderella and the “minimally counterintuitive superheroes,” the key idea being that stories and characters are often particularly memorable because they occupy the “sweet spot” of the “weird-but-not-too weird.” That seems an apt description of many tales from both Baum and the Bible.
Fowkes’ take on The Wizard of Oz also reminds me of one of Paul Ricoeur’s central ideas about interpretation, namely that texts comprised of metaphors and symbols lend themselves, by their nature, to various understandings. We must “resist,” he says, “the temptation to believe that each text has its own correct interpretation, its own static, hidden meaning,” and instead recognize that “reading is, first and foremost, a struggle with the text” (494-5). The point is not that a given text can mean anything – interpretations must still be based on reason and evidence. There is virtually no evidence that Baum’s poppy fields, for instance, symbolize either his sadness over the treatment of Native Americans, or his desire to see them wiped from the face of the earth. But there is reason to think that his Oz stories have several things to say about gender, imperialism, and diversity – even if those things don’t always agree with one another.
For me, this is where the real (and really simple) connection to religion comes in: however you define it, “religion” is waaaay more complicated than The Wizard of Oz (!), and religious stories are not just myth-like but involve actual myths. It therefore seems entirely sensible to imagine that religions are also open to a host of reasonable yet divergent interpretations. This is of course a HUGE topic on its own, and one that I’m not going to go into here. I really just want to suggest that recognizing actual complexity – in stories, religion, people – can help us avoid shallow, one-sided, and possibly harmful interpretations based on simplistic, and simplifying, assumptions. Again, it’s a ridiculously simple idea, but one that I think too often gets lost in all the shouting about what things “really” mean.
Works Cited
Fowkes, Katherine A. The Fantasy Film. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.
Gill, Sam D. Beyond the “Primitive”: The Religions of Nonliterate Peoples. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1982.
McCutcheon, Russell T. “Myth.” Guide to the Study of Religion. Ed. Russell T. McCutcheon and Willi Braun. Cassell: New York, 2000. 190-208.
Ricoeur, Paul. “World of the Text, World of the Reader.” A Ricoeur Reader: Reflection and Imagination. Ed. Mario Valdés. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991. 491-497.
Schwartz, Evan I. Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009.
St. John, Thomas. “Indian-Hating in ‘The Wizard of Oz.’” CounterPunch 26-28 June. 2004.
Maybe I’m missing something, but…how can people think Baum didn’t mean his endorsement of genocide? I can see arguing that it doesn’t affect the books all that much, but genocidal racism towards Native Americans wasn’t especially uncommon in his day. If he’s writing multiple editorials about how he hates Native Americans and wants them all dead, it seems likely that he hated Native Americans and wanted them all dead.
I’d say that in the books, the racism comes out in fairly straightforward and banal ways. (1) There are lots of different peoples and fantasy races, but there are no black people, or Native Americans for that matter. Baum’s fantasy world is white; indeed, you could say that part of the fantasy is that only white people exist (along with fun fantasy races.) (2) There are evil creatures (witches) who it’s a moral good to kill. that’s the logic of genocide, pretty much (though it’s fairly casual in comparison to someting like Lord of the Rings.)
fwiw, I very much like the first couple Oz books; the series goes off the rails after that.
Thanks for the comments, Noah. There are a few different apologist approaches to the editorials. The most common argument is that Baum might have meant what he said at the time, but most people were racist against Natives then and Aberdeen was not far from the “front lines” of settler-Native conflict (it was particularly close to Wounded Knee). So Baum temporarily lost his moral bearings and later felt terrible about this, and we can see how bad he felt by all the nice non-genocidal things in his books.
Another, less common argument is that Baum’s editorials were satirical. Just like Swift didn’t actually want people to eat babies, Baum didn’t actually want all the Native people killed. This reading is based in part on the (again) circular (and, imo, confused and irrational) reasoning that Baum was a good guy and therefore would not have written something legitimately horrifying. But it’s also based in part on the stuff that Baum says in the editorials that indicts white settler culture. For instance, he refers to the fact that whites have “wrong them [Natives] for centuries” (and therefore why not add one more enormous wrong to the pile and kill those who are still left). Also this:
“An eastern contemporary, with a grain of wisdom in its wit, says that ‘when the whites win a fight, it is a victory, and when the Indians win it, it is a massacre.’”
Hmmm…yeah, that sounds pretty unconvincing. You could imagine Kipling saying something like that, and it wouldn’t be satire. It sounds like Baum is a genocidal racist with a nuanced understanding of imperialism and genocide. That’s not at all contradictory. It makes him more interesting to read perhaps, but it’s not exactly morally exculpatory. For people on the business end of genocide, it doesn’t really matter much if the butchers feel some ethical qualms as they hack away.
The of its time defense sort of ignores the fact that Baum lived at a time when the U.S. had become significantly more racist. It’s not just, in the past, people were racist; it’s that Baum was at a time where ideological racism was having a resurgence. So, it’s not that he wasn’t enlightened; it’s that he was participating in a movement to make America more racist and marginalize black and indigenous peoples.
I think the racism in Wizard of Oz seems pretty incidental for the most part; it’s not like H.P. Lovecraft or Margaret Mitchell where it’s central and unavoidable. But I don’t think Oz contradicts those editorials either, really.
Of course you’re completely right that having nuanced views of imperialism doesn’t negate the possibility of also being pro-genocide. And being pro-genocide also doesn’t mean that one can’t (a la Hitler) also be nice to puppies. But we really like to put people/authors/books/religions into neat boxes and not think much about complexity, or whether that complexity is relevant to the conversation at hand (saying that you agree with Hitler’s stance on puppies doesn’t remotely connect to what you might think of his views on human beings).
Another point I should mention that the pro-Baum folks often bring up is his apparently legit feminist bona fides (I haven’t read any of his material explicitly on gender equality so can’t comment on it firsthand). Also, his mother in law — which whom he apparently agreed on most things — was feminist (and Native rights!) activist Matilda Gage.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L._Frank_Baum#Women.27s_suffrage_advocate
I did not know this about Baum. I wonder if Gregory Maguire was aware of this? Even if he isn’t, it resonates with the critique of colonialism in his revisionist Oz.
‘people tend to come to them having already decided what they think’
oh, this 100% for Dawkins. It’s the infuriating thing about his atheist “work” that it’s so empirically shoddy.
There’s huge debates about just the question of what religion is, qua human activity and social phenomenon. What causes religious beliefs, what might their function be (do they have a function?)?
And even if you blackbox all that stuff and just focus on the output side, which is what Dawkins wants to do, well, there too, there’s lots and lots of proper scientific research on the effects of religion (or, typically, religiosity) on health, mental well-being, happiness, character traits… You want to add to that historical claims about the connections between religion and sectarian violence, intolerance, etc.? Great, there’s loads of historical research to read there too.
Instead we get an argument that basically goes “religion is a force for evil in the world because (a) superstition, (b) the inquisition, and (c) suicide bombers.” By his own empiricist methodological standards, his arguments about atheism should be laughed right out of town; you want to argue that religion, as some sort of natural psychological kind, is/has been overall a negative for humanity? Engage with the fucking massive (and fascinating) empirical literatures!
…sorry, it’s one of my hobby horses. As you were.
“Another point I should mention that the pro-Baum folks often bring up is his apparently legit feminist bona fides”
Lots of feminists have been pro-imperialist, alas…
I think the Oz universe is so interesting to look at, and this new (to me) information about Baum just makes it all the more so. Like @MrFengi mentioned, as I was reading your piece, I couldn’t help wondering if Maguire was aware of this side of Baum, and whether he was in agreement or disagreement, and whether his work was intended to be a critique of Baum’s beliefs.
Admittedly, I am most familiar with the 1939 film, The Wizard of Oz, and the Wicked musical (as opposed to Maguire’s book), the latter of which I know has certainly taken many artistic liberties, but I couldn’t help but find some interesting ties while reading this. I know that the musical is an adaptation of what is, essentially, a fanon work by Maguire, and, thus, neither can -really- be tied back to Baum, but I still think it’s interesting to see how they may or may not play into each other, especially when you consider how much time had passed between when Baum and Maguire were writing (nearly a century between publishing dates!).
The thing that really stood out to me while reading your post was a particular song from the musical. It’s called “Wonderful” and is performed mainly by the Wizard himself. With this discourse on colonialism and the genocide of Native populations now in mind, I couldn’t help but make an instant tie to the song. When the thought of colonialism comes up, I think a common related thought, at least for myself, is the stark reminder that history is written by the white suppressor. One of the exchanges in “Wonderful” that always stood out to me is the following:
WIZARD: (spoken) See, I never had a family of my own. So, I guess I just wanted to give the citizens of Oz everything.
ELPHABA:(spoken) So you lied to them.
WIZARD: (spoken) Elphaba, where I’m from, we believe all sorts of things that aren’t true. We call it “history.”
(sung) A man’s called a traitor – or liberator,
a rich man’s a thief – or philanthropist.
Is one a crusader – or ruthless invader?
It’s all in which label
is able to persist.
There are precious few at ease
with moral ambiguities,
so we act as though they don’t exist.
Where I’m not familiar with the book, I can’t speak to whether this concept came from Maguire, but I still find it relevant. I can’t help but wonder if Maguire, and also the people who adapted his work for the stage, were aware of Baum’s editorials. And whether they were or weren’t, which understanding of Oz did they have (of those presented in the above Baum is Good/Baum is Bad section)? Are the later works an explicit critique of the original, or just creative works that were inspired by the world and characters Baum had created? For example, at least in terms of the 1939 film and the Wicked musical, I would argue that Wicked is more successful at presenting feminist icons, but was that intentional or happenstance? I have a feeling that I’m going to find myself thinking about this matter for a while.
This has likely gotten horribly off-topic, but those were my thoughts. Thanks for bearing with my rambling, if you did!