31 August 2007

BSB Flashback: Hop on Pop



9 April 2007

Author/Illustrator: Dr. Seuss

Many point to Bruno Bettelheim's award winning book, The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales, as the moment that Freudian psychoanalysis officially came in contact with the realm of children's literature. While it is true that Bettleheim may have been one of the first academics to tackle the subject, it was the seminal work of Theodore Geisel (Dr. Seuss) that introduced children to Freud for the first time. Case in point: his playful exploration of the Oedipal complex: Hop on Pop.

Hop on Pop was published in 1963, a full 13 years before Bettelheim's Enchantment, and decades before Freud was widely dismissed by the psychological community as a coked-up sex fiend. Pop can be read as a thinly veiled introduction to the disturbing psychosexual theory that the father is the enemy who is preventing us from realizing some deeply ingrained sexual need for our mothers. Gross! Luckily, Seuss didn't get too caught up in the raging Sigmundsteria of the times, otherwise he may have been tempted to go all-out Oedipal and written his book as Hop on Pop then Marry Mommy, which probably would have tarnished his otherwise untouchable legacy.

Upon closer inspection, Freud and other psychological influences can be found sprinkled throughout Seuss's work. The Cat in the Hat is nothing more than a hyperkinetic romp through the subconscious with the Id, Ego, and Superego. The entire plot of Green Eggs and Ham is driven by Freud's theories of the repression and sublimation of base impulses. (What else could "Sam I Am" be, other than an anal-retentive individual's guilt-ridden projection of the repressed self and its latent desires?) And Horton Hears a Who? Horton hears a psychiatrist diagnosing him with schizophrenia, that's who he hears. In fact, if you read too closely, Seussville runs the risk of becoming an inescapable labyrinth of Freudian slips and slides... so maybe we're better off reading with eyes wide shut.

5 comments:

Sara said...

OK, I'm laughing hysterically, but can think of nothing to say. Maybe I'll just go curl up with my old copy of Hop on Pop.

Elaine Magliaro said...

Okay...this is too funny! Sorry I missed this post the first time around. Have you expounded yet on Freud and Robert Munsch's LOVE YOU FOREVER? I think Munsch takes the Oedipal complex way beyond Dr Seuss. Pop's not even mentioned in Munsch's book. I guess he felt Mom didn't need Pop once she had her baby boy!

Anonymous said...

"(What else could 'Sam I Am' be, other than an anal-retentive individual's guilt-ridden projection of the repressed self and its latent desires?)"

That may be the best sentence I've read in a blog EVER.

Liz Allman said...

I've been away and so sad that it took me so long to read this post. Excuse me I need to re-examine Oh The Places You'll Go.

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