Like a film released just two years earlier, it can be equally interpreted in two distinctly oppositional ways. The turtle stacking imposed by the dictatorial Yertle is a metaphor for fascist authoritarianism awhile Horton saving the Whos speaks to post-war treatment of a small vanquished island nation. In famous titles like Yertle the Turtle and Horton Hears a Who, Seuss began cleverly inserting subtle political messages aimed toward adults that allowed him to disguise very sophisticated social allegories as simple books of rhymes to bed to kids at bedtime. The books that Seuss published in the 1950’s represent a significant leap forward creatively, but also thematically. The book was a declaration of independence of sorts by Seuss that he had grown weary of working within the conventional expectations of children’s literature, a genre he’d been enjoyed success within since the late 1930’s. Seuss published If I Ran the Zoo in which a young boy declares that if he were in charge of the zoo, he would let loose all the conventional animals found there and instead populate with a collection of fantastical and imaginative creatures. We are thankful for their contributions and encourage you to make your own. These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community.
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