With his thumbprint on the most ubiquitous films of childhood, Walt Disney is widely considered to be the most conventional of all major American moviemakers. The adjective "Disneyfied" has become shorthand for a creative work that has abandoned any controversial or substantial content to find commercial success. But does Disney deserve that reputation? Douglas Brode overturns the idea of Disney as a middlebrow filmmaker by detailing how Disney movies played a key role in transforming children of the Eisenhower era into the radical youth of the Age of Aquarius. Using close readings of Disney projects, Brode shows that Disney's films were frequently ahead of their time thematically. Long before the cultural tumult of the sixties, Disney films preached pacifism, introduced a generation to the notion of feminism, offered the screen's first drug-trip imagery, encouraged young people to become runaways, insisted on the need for integration, advanced the notion of a sexual revolution, created the concept of multiculturalism, called for a return to nature, nourished the cult of the righteous outlaw, justified violent radicalism in defense of individual rights, argued in favor of communal living, and encouraged antiauthoritarian attitudes. Brode argues that Disney, more than any other influence in popular culture, should be considered the primary creator of the sixties counterculture—a reality that couldn't be further from his "conventional" reputation.
This collection of essays examine how the Disney studio has re-interpreted—for better or worse—classic literature into films both treasured and disdained.
Pedagogical Perspectives on Commercial Cinema Douglas Brode, Shea T. Brode ... Jeffery P. Dennis, “Cartoons,” in Youth, Education, and Sexualities: An International Encyclopedia, vol. ... Griffin, Tinker Bells and Evil Queens, 211. 23.
Now, nature and art were completely collapsed: the first word of the title of Leaves of Grass (1855) refers to the paper on which Walt Whitman's philosophic poetry was presented as well as a reference to the trees that in ancient times ...
This work proceeds chronologically, in the order that plays were written, allowing the reader to trace the development of Shakespeare as an author and to see how the changing cultural climate of the Elizabethans flowered into film centuries ...
... 134 Mastrioanni, Marcello, 151 Mazurki, Mike, 29, 249 Mazurski, Paul, 164 McCarty, Mary, 210 McCulley, Johnston, 95 McDaniel, Hattie, 53, 57 McDowell, Roddy, 204, 249 McEnery, Peter, 156 McGoohan, Patrick, 198 McGuire, Dorothy, 10, ...
Don’t miss out on this Peanuts collection featuring Woodstock, the most recognizable yellow bird in the world—even in disguise!
They reflect the hopes of a society trying to understand itself in the wake of World War II. This book takes a fresh look at the park, analyzing its cultural narrative by looking beyond consumerism and corporate marketing to how Disney ...
his birthday celebration had the elegiac quality of Walt's obits from two years earlier. ... When half a million people gathered at Woodstock in 1969, in a mass celebration of youth, some cultural observers would note that it was Walt ...
As Douglas Brode points out in From Walt to Woodstock: How Disney Created the Counterculture, the idea that Disney was a conservative, conventional filmmaker of minimal substance has been repeated so often, particularly within ...
In this volume, scholars from varying backgrounds take a close look at facets of the Disney canon as more than agents of entertainment or consumption, and into underlying messages at the very heart of the Disney phenomenon: the cultural ...