|
Dr. Seuss is the pen name of Theodor Seuss Geisel (March 2, 1904 – September 24,
1991). He was a famous American writer and cartoonist best known for his collection of
children's books.

Dr. Seuss is the pen name of Theodor Seuss Geisel (March 2,
1904
– September 24, 1991). He was a famous American writer and cartoonist best known
for
his collection of children's books.
Life and work
Geisel was
born in
Springfield, Massachusetts, on March 2, 1904. He graduated from
Dartmouth College
in 1925, and entered
Lincoln College, Oxford, intending to earn a doctorate in literature.
At
Oxford, however, he met Helen Palmer, married her in 1927, and returned
to
the
United States. He began submitting humorous articles and illustrations to
Judge
(a humor magazine),
The Saturday Evening Post,
Life,
Vanity
Fair, and
Liberty. Geisel's first work signed as "Dr. Seuss" appeared six months
into his work for Judge. One notable "Technocracy Number" made fun of
Technocracy,
Inc. and featured satirical rhymes at the expense of
Frederick Soddy. He became nationally
famous from his advertisements for Flit, a common
insecticide at the time. His slogan,
"Quick, Henry, the Flit!" became a popular
catchphrase; Seuss supported himself and his wife
through the
Great Depression by drawing advertising for
General Electric, NBC,
Standard
Oil, and many other companies. He also wrote and drew a short lived
comic strip called
Hejji in 1935.
Even at this early stage, Geisel had started using the pen
name "Dr. Seuss".
Seuss was his mother's maiden name; as an immigrant from Germany she would
have
pronounced it more or less as "zoice", but today it is universally pronounced in
Americanized form, with an initial s sound and rhyming with "juice". The
"Dr." is
an acknowledgment of his father's unfulfilled hopes that Seuss would
earn a doctorate at
Oxford. Geisel also used the pen name Theo. LeSieg (Geisel
spelled backwards) for
books he wrote but others illustrated.
In 1936, while
Seuss sailed again to Europe,
the rhythm of the ship's engines inspired the poem
that became his first book, And to
Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.
Seuss wrote three more children's books before
the second world war (see list of
works below), two of which are, atypically for him, in
prose.
As
World War II began, Dr. Seuss turned to political cartoons, drawing over
400
in two years. Dr. Seuss's political cartoons opposed the viciousness of Hitler
and
Mussolini; some depict Japanese Americans as traitors. One such cartoon
appeared
days before the
internments started.
In 1942 Dr.
Seuss turned his energies to
direct support of the U.S. government's war effort.
First, he worked drawing posters for
the
Treasury Department and the
War Production Board. Then, in 1943, he joined the
Army
and was sent to Frank
Capra's
Signal Corps Unit in Hollywood,
where he wrote films
for the
United States Armed Forces, including "Your Job in Germany," a 1945 propaganda
film about peace in Europe after World War II, "Design for Death," a study of
Japanese
culture that won the
Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1948, and the
Private
Snafu series of army training films. While in the Army he was
awarded the
Legion of
Merit. Dr. Seuss's non-military films from around this time were
also well received;
Gerald McBoing-Boing won the
Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Animated) in
1951.
Despite his numerous awards, Dr. Seuss never won the
Caldecott Medal, nor
the
Newbery. Three of his titles were chosen as Caldecott runners-up (now
referred to as
Caldecott Honor books): McElligot's Pool (1947),
Bartholomew and the Oobleck
(1949), and If I Ran the Zoo (1950).
After the war, Dr. Seuss moved with his
wife Helen to La Jolla, California,
a small community forming part of San Diego.
Returning to children's books, he wrote what many consider to be his finest
works,
including such favorites as If I Ran the Zoo, (1950), Scrambled
Eggs Super!
(1953), On Beyond Zebra! (1955), If I Ran the Circus
(1956), and
How the
Grinch Stole Christmas! (1957).
At the same time, an important development occurred
that influenced much of
Seuss's later work. In May 1954,
Life
magazine
published a report on illiteracy
among school children, which concluded that children were
not learning to read
because their books were boring. Accordingly, Seuss's publisher made up
a list
of 400 words he felt were important and asked Dr. Seuss to cut the list to 250
words and write a book using only those words. Nine months later, Seuss, using
220 of the
words given to him, completed
The Cat in the Hat. This book was a tour de
force—it retained the
drawing style, verse rhythms, and all the imaginative power of
Seuss's earlier
works, but because of its simplified vocabulary could be read by beginning
readers.
In 1960 Bennett
Cerf bet Dr. Seuss $50 that he couldn't write an
entire book using only
fifty words. The result was
Green Eggs and Ham. Curiously,
Cerf never paid him the $50.
These books achieved significant international success,
and remain very
popular in the present day.
Dr. Seuss went on to write many other
children's books, both in his new
simplified-vocabulary manner (sold as "Beginner
Books") and in his older, more elaborate style. The Beginner Books were not
easy for
Seuss, and reportedly he labored for months crafting them.
At various times Seuss also
wrote books for adults that used the same style
of verse and pictures: The Seven Lady
Godivas, Oh, The Places You'll
Go!, and his final book You're Only Old
Once, a satire of hospitals
and the geriatric lifestyle.
Following a very
difficult illness, Helen Palmer Geisel committed suicide on
October 23,1967. Seuss married
Audrey Stone Diamond on June 21, 1968. Seuss
himself died, following several years of
illness, in
La Jolla, California on
September 24, 1991.
Dr. Seuss did not like
publicity. This may have been due to his German
ancestry - during World War I, his classmates
used to nickname him "The Kaiser".
Dr. Seuss's meters
Dr. Seuss wrote most of
his books in a verse form that in the terminology of
metrics would be characterized as
anapestic tetrameter,
a meter employed also by
Byron and other poets of the English
literary canon. (It is also the meter
of the famous Christmas poem
A Visit From St.
Nicholas). Abstractly, anapestic tetrameter consists of
four rhythmic units (anapests),
each composed of two weak beats followed by one
strong, schematized below:
- x x X x x X x x X x x X
Often, the first weak syllable is omitted, or an
additional weak syllable is
added at the end. A typical line (the first line of If I Ran
the Circus)
is:
- In ALL the whole TOWN the most WONderful SPOT
Seuss generally maintained this meter quite strictly, up to late in his
career, when he was no longer able to maintain strict rhythm in all lines. The
consistency of his meter was one of his hallmarks; the many imitators and
parodists of
Seuss are often unable to write in strict anapestic tetrameter, or
unaware that they should,
and thus sound clumsy in comparison with the original.
Seuss also wrote verse in
trochaic tetrameter,
an arrangement of four units each with a strong followed by a weak
beat:
- X x X x X x X x
An example is the title (and
first line) of One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish,
Blue Fish. The formula for trochaic meter
permits the final weak position in
the line to be omitted, which facilitates the construction
of rhymes.
Seuss generally maintained trochaic meter only for brief passages, and for
longer stretches typically mixed it with iambic
tetrameter:
- x X x X
x X x X
which is easier to write. Thus, for example, the magicians in
Bartholemew
and the Oobleck make their first appearance chanting in trochees (thus
resembling the witches of
Shakespeare's
Macbeth):
- Shuffle,
duffle, muzzle, muff
then switch to iambs for the oobleck
spell:
- Go make the oobleck tumble down
- On every street, in
every town!
In
Green Eggs and Ham, Sam-I-Am generally speaks in
trochees, and the
exasperated character he proselytizes replies in iambs.
While
most of Seuss's books are either uniformly anapestic or
iambic-trochaic, a few mix triple
and double rhythms. Thus, for instance,
Happy Birthday to You is generally written in
anapestic tetrameter, but
breaks into iambo-trochaic meter for the "Dr. Derring's singing
herrings" and
"Who-Bubs" episodes.
Dr. Seuss's art
Seuss's earlier
artwork often employed the shaded texture of pencil drawings
or watercolors, but in
children's books of the postwar period he generally
employed the starker medium of pen and
ink, normally using just black, white,
and one or two colors. Later books such as The
Lorax used more colors,
not necessarily to better effect.
Seuss's figures are
often somewhat rounded and droopy. This is true, for
instance, of the faces of the Grinch and
of the Cat in the Hat. It is also true
of virtually all buildings and machinery that Seuss
drew: although these objects
abound in straight lines in real life, Seuss carefully avoided
straight lines in
drawing them. For buildings, this could be accomplished in part through
choice
of architecture. For machines, Seuss simply distorted reality; for example,
If
I Ran the Circus includes a droopy hoisting crane and a droopy steam
calliope.
Seuss evidently enjoyed drawing architecturally elaborate objects. His
endlessly varied (but never rectilinear) palaces, ramps, platforms, and
free-standing
stairways are among his most evocative creations. Seuss also drew
elaborate imaginary
machines, of which the Audio-Telly-O-Tally-O-Count, from
Dr. Seuss's Sleep Book, is
one example. Seuss also liked drawing outlandish
arrangements of feathers or fur, for
example, the 500th hat of Bartholemew
Cubbins, the tail of Gertrude McFuzz, and
the pet for girls who like
to brush and comb, in One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue
Fish.
Seuss's images often convey motion vividly. He was fond of a sort of "voilà"
gesture, in which the hand flips outward, spreading the fingers slightly
backward with
the thumb up; this is done by Ish, for instance, in One Fish,
Two Fish when he creates
fish (who perform the gesture themselves with their
fins), in the introduction of the various
acts of If I Ran the Circus,
and in the introduction of the Little Cats in
The
Cat in the Hat Comes Back. Seuss also follows the cartoon
tradition of showing motion
with lines, for instance in the sweeping lines that
accompany Sneelock's final dive in If
I Ran the Circus. Cartoonist's
lines are also used to illustrate the action of the
senses (sight, smell, and
hearing) in The Big Brag and even of thought, as in the
moment when the
Grinch conceives his awful idea.
Recurring
images
Seuss's early work in advertising and editorial cartooning produced sketches
that received more perfect realization later on in the children's books. Often,
the
expressive use to which Seuss put an image later on was quite different from
the original.
The examples below are from the Web site of the
Mandeville Special Collections Library of the
University of California at San
Diego (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/collects/seuss.html
).
- An
editorial cartoon of July 16, 1941 (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dspolitic/pm/10716cs.jpg)
depicts a whale resting on the top of a mountain, as a parody of American
isolationists. This was later rendered (with no apparent political
content) as the Wumbus
of On Beyond Zebra (1955). Seussian whales
(cheerful and balloon-shaped, with long
eyelashes) also occur in
McElligot's Pool, If I Ran the Circus, and other
books.
-
Another editorial cartoon from 1941 (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dspolitic/pm/10519cs.jpg)
shows a long cow with many legs and udders, representing the conquered nations
of
Europe being milked by Adolf
Hitler. This later became the Umbus of On Beyond Zebra.
- The tower of turtles in
this editorial cartoon (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dspolitic/pm/1942/20321cs.jpg)
from 1941
prefigures a similar tower in Yertle the Turtle.
- Seuss's earliest elephants
were for advertising and had somewhat
wrinkly
ears (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dsads/bizpostcards/postcardD101.shtml<
/i>),
much as real elephants do. With And to Think that I Saw it on Mulberry
Street (1937) and Horton Hatches the Egg (1940), the ears became
more stylized,
somewhat like angel wings and thus appropriate to the saintly
Horton. During World War II,
the elephant image appeared as an emblem for India in
four editorial cartoons (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dspolitic/India.html).
Horton and similar elephants appear frequently in the postwar children's
books.
- While drawing advertisements for Flit, Seuss
became adept at drawing
insects with
huge stingers (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dsads/flit/flit.jpg),
shaped like a gentle S-curve and with a sharp end that included a
rearward-pointing barb on
its lower side. Their facial expressions depict
gleeful malevolence. These insects were
later rendered in an editorial cartoon
as a
swarm of Allied aircraft (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dspolitic/pm/1942/21111cs.jpg)
(1942), and later still as the Sneedle of On Beyond Zebra.
Dr. Seuss's politics
From his work, it would appear
that Dr. Seuss's political views were what
20th century Americans would call liberal. His
early political cartoons show a passionate opposition to fascism, and
he urged Americans
to oppose it, both before and after the entry of the
United States into World
War II.
Seuss's cartoons also called attention to the early stages of the
Holocaust, and denounced
discrimination in America against blacks and Jews.
Seuss's harsh treatment of the Japanese
and of Japanese-Americans, mentioned
above, has struck many readers as a strange moral blind
spot in a generally
idealistic man.
Seuss moved to La Jolla, California in 1948,
following his years living and
working in Hollywood. A widely told story says that when he
first went to
register to vote in La Jolla, some Republican friends called him over to where
they were registering voters, but Ted said, "You my friends are over there, but
I am
going over here [to the Democratic registration]." Geisel had since been a
lifelong
Democrat.
Seuss's children's books also express his commitment to social justice as
he
perceived it, notably in five of the books.
Horton Hears a Who (1954),
Horton, an open-minded elephant, finds
evidence of a world beyond our familiar one.
Like
Galileo Galilei or
Giordano Bruno, the authorities want to punish Horton and destroy
the
evidence of his discovery. Seuss comes out strongly in favor of intellectual
freedom.
The Sneetches and Other Stories (1961) written around the birth of
the
American Civil Rights Movement, this tale of identity politics concerns a
huckster who
exploits people who want to feel superior to others based on their
ethnicity.
The
Lorax (1971), though told in full-tilt Seussian style,
strikes many
readers as fundamentally an environmentalist tract. It is the tale of a ruthless
and greedy industrialist (the "Onceler") who so thoroughly destroys the local
environment
that he ultimately puts his own company out of business. The book is
striking for being told
from the viewpoint (generally bitter, self-hating, and
remorseful) of the Onceler himself. In
1989, an effort was made by lumbering
interests in
Laytonville, California to have the
book banned from local school libraries,
on the grounds that it was unfair to the lumber
industry.
The Butter Battle Book (1984) written in Seuss's old age, is both a
parody and denunciation of the
Nuclear arms race, emphasizing the reckless and
self-destructive behavior of
both sides.
Seuss's personal values also are apparent
in the much earlier How the
Grinch Stole Christmas (1957), which can be taken (partly)
as a polemic
against materialism—the Grinch thinks he can steal Christmas from the Whos by
stealing all the Christmas gifts and decorations, and attains a kind of
enlightenment
when the Whos prove him wrong.
Shortly before the end of the
Watergate scandal,
Geisel also converted one of his famous children's books
into a bold polemic, published in
major newspapers through the column of his
friend
Art Buchwald, and entitled
Richard M.
Nixon, Will You Please Go Now! -- Nine days later, Nixon went.
Adaptations of Seuss's
work
For most of his career Dr. Seuss was reluctant to have his characters
marketed in contexts outside of his own books. However, he did allow a few
animated
cartoons, an art form in which he himself had gained experience during
the Second World War.
In 1966, Seuss
authorized the eminent cartoon artist Chuck
Jones, his friend and former
colleague from the war, to make a cartoon
version of
How the Grinch Stole
Christmas! This cartoon was very faithful to the
original book, and is considered a
classic by many to this day. In 1971, a cartoon
version of
The Cat in the Hat was
made as well, but it was considered less
successful.
Toward the end of his life,
Seuss seems to have relaxed his policy, and
several other cartoons and toys were made
featuring his characters, usually the
Cat in the Hat and the Grinch. When Seuss died in 1991
his widow
Audrey Geisel was placed in charge of all licensing matters. Since then, Audrey
Geisel has become a controversial figure among many of Seuss's fans, seen as
being far
more liberal in permitting commercialization of her husband's
characters and stories. She
approved a live-action film version of "the Grinch"
starring
Jim Carrey, as well as a
Seuss-themed Broadway musical called
Seussical
(both released in 2000).
A
live-action
film based on The Cat in the Hat was released in 2003. The usual theme park
and product tie-ins have also been implemented.
List of books by Dr.
Seuss
-
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street New York:
Vanguard
Press, 1937.
-
The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins New
York: Vanguard Press, 1938.
-
The King's Stilts New York: Random
House, 1939.
-
The Seven Lady Godivas New York: Random House, 1939.
-
Horton Hatches the Egg New York: Random House, 1940.
-
McElligot's Pool New York: Random House, 1947. Caldecott Honor Book.
-
Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose New York: Random House, 1948.
-
Bartholomew and the Oobleck New York: Random House, 1949. Caldecott
Honor Book.
-
If I Ran the Zoo New York: Random House, 1950.
Caldecott Honor Book.
-
Scrambled Eggs Super! New York: Random
House, 1953.
-
Horton Hears a Who! New York: Random House, 1954.
-
On Beyond Zebra! New York: Random House, 1955.
-
If I Ran the Circus New York: Random House, 1956.
-
How the Grinch
Stole Christmas! New York: Random House, 1957.
-
The Cat in the Hat
New York: Beginner Books, Random House, 1957.
-
The Cat in the Hat Comes
Back New York: Beginner Books, Random House,
1958.
-
Yertle the
Turtle and Other Stories New York: Random House, 1958.
-
Happy Birthday
to You! New York: Random House, 1959.
-
One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue
Fish New York: Beginner Books, Random
House, 1960.
-
Green Eggs
and Ham New York: Beginner Books, Random House, 1960.
-
The Sneetches
and Other Stories New York: Random House, 1961.
-
Dr. Seuss's Sleep
Book New York: Random House, 1962.
-
Dr. Seuss's ABC New York:
Beginner Books, Random House, 1963.
-
Hop on Pop New York: Beginner
Books, Random House, 1963.
-
Fox
in Socks New York: Beginner
Books, Random House, 1965.
-
I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew
New York: Random House, 1965.
-
The Cat in the Hat Song Book New
York: Random House, 1967.
-
The Foot Book : Dr. Seuss's Wacky Book of
Opposites New York: Bright &
Early Books, Random House, 1968.
-
I
Can Lick 30 Tigers Today! and Other Stories New York: Random House,
1969.
-
I Can Draw It Myself New York: Beginner Books, Random House, 1970.
-
Mr. Brown Can Moo! Can You? New York: Bright & Early Books, Random
House, 1970.
- The
Lorax New York: Random House, 1971. National
Council for the Social
Studies Notable Children's Trade Book / Social Studies.
-
Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now! New York: Bright & Early
Books,
Random House, 1972.
-
Did I Ever Tell You How Lucky You Are? New York:
Random House 1973.
-
The Shape of Me and Other Stuff New York:
Bright & Early Books, Random
House, 1973.
-
There's a Wocket in My
Pocket! New York: Bright & Early Books, Random
House, 1974.
-
Oh,
the Thinks You Can Think! New York: Beginner Books, Random House,
1975.
-
The Cat's Quizzer New York: Beginner Books, Random House, 1976.
-
I Can Read with My Eyes Shut! New York: Beginner Books, Random House,
1978.
-
Oh Say Can You Say? New York: Beginner Books, Random House,
1979.
-
Hunches in Bunches New York: Random House, 1982.
-
The Butter Battle Book New York: Random House, 1984.
-
You're Only Old Once! : A Book for Obsolete Children New York: Random
House, 1986.
-
Oh, the Places You'll Go! New York: Random House, 1990.
-
Daisy - Head Mayzie New York: Random House, 1995.
-
Hooray
for Diffendoofer Day! New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1998. By Dr.
Seuss with some help from
Jack Prelutsky & Lane Smith (posthumous)
-
Gerald McBoing Boing New
York: Random House, 2000 (posthumous)
Biography by: This article is licensed under the GNU Free
Documentation License and uses material adapted in whole or in part from the
Wikipedia
article on Dr. Seuss.
GNU Free Documentation
License
Copyright ©
2000,2001,2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
02110-1301 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license
document, but changing it is not allowed.
|