Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

A World Where Monsters Rule

4 views
Skip to first unread message

Dan Clore

unread,
May 21, 2012, 6:23:00 AM5/21/12
to

http://socialistworker.org/2012/05/17/a-world-where-monsters-rule
Obituary: Maurice Sendak
A world where monsters rule
Jim Ramey celebrates the life of Maurice Sendak, best known as the
writer and illustrator behind Where the Wild Things Are.
May 17, 2012

IT'S ENTIRELY plausible that people reading this will have learned how
to read from a book written or illustrated by Maurice Sendak, who died
last week at the age of 83.

Along with Theodor Geisel and Shel Silverstein, his works shook up the
staid world of children's books, helping to create an honest children's
literature that educated and entertained at once. His illustrations,
particularly the Wild Things and his animal drawings, were a direct
influence on Jim Henson when he created the Muppets and helped create
Sesame Street, which revolutionized television and childhood learning.

But this new way of looking at children's education and involvement was
born out of Sendak's own childhood, full of melancholy, sickness and
horror. More than anything else, Maurice Sendak was a product of the
Nazi's Holocaust against Jewish Europeans.

He insisted throughout his life that his household was haunted by
relatives who did not, like his mother and father, make it to the U.S.
before the U.S. government effectively closed the borders to Jewish
immigrants. Some estimates say that simply lifting the bureaucratic
regulations and letting Jewish refugees into the U.S. could have saved
200,000 people who instead became victims of the Holocaust.

Sendak reflected on his childhood in several touching and enlightening
interviews on NPR's "Fresh Air," where he said pointedly:

I came up late for dinner, my mother howling from the window about
Leo and Benjamin and the other children my age who could never come up
for supper, who were good to their mothers, but now they were dead, and
I was lucky...I hated them. I hated them for dying. Because all they
brought were violent scenes in my house between my mother and father. My
mother pulling hair out of her head, my father diving onto the bed.

Sickness also struck Sendak, keeping him in bed reading and drawing for
days on end. On one occasion while healthy, he was tossing the ball
around with a neighborhood boy he called "Lloydie" when he overthrew
him. Lloydie ran out into the street and was struck and killed by
traffic. Decades later, Sendak would still say that he was responsible
for Lloydie's death.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

SUCH TRAUMAS are, of course, unique to Sendak's life. But they are
elementally a part of growing up for everyone. The loss of friends, the
burdens of family and beginning to understand one's mortality are
seminal moments that happen in childhood and affect us deeply. They were
nearly always shuffled to the side in children's literature, if
approached at all.

Sendak's work stood opposed to such etiquette and obfuscation. Even in
his earliest works, there was a darkness that was only half hidden with
humor. For instance, his pre-Wild Things tetralogy Nutshell Library
consists of rote learning parodies like Alligators All Around, in which
alligators take us through the alphabet--where F is for forever fooling,
P is for pushing people, Q is for quite quarrelsome and S is for
shockingly spoiled.

Also contained in this collection is One was Johnny, a counting book
that was dedicated "FOR GENE." It is believed this is a reference to
Sendak's life partner of more than 50 years, Dr. Eugene Glynn. The book
has Johnny's quiet time interrupted by, among other things, a tiger, a
monkey, a turtle and a burglar.

It ends with the line: "1 was Johnny who lived by himself. AND LIKED IT
LIKE THAT!" The question that leaps out to readers is: Why would you
dedicate a book that ends like that to your boyfriend? Sendak only
officially came out of the closet in 2007, after Gene had died--so that
his mother could have a straight son, he said. His words play as a
justification to the straight world for why he chose to "be alone"--and
including Gene in it must have been an important act of love in a
society that rejected their relationship.

These were his minor works, though. The books that will define his
legacy came between 1964 and 1981, and were in order: Where the Wild
Things Are, In the Night Kitchen and Outside Over There. He called these
a trilogy because they dealt with many similar themes.

In each of these books, the child characters come up against a defining
moment and meet the challenge as best as they are able.

Also interesting is that each main character is illustrated at the end
of the book in the same place they were in the beginning, indicating
that the changes are not obvious to the world at large or permanent to
the characters themselves.

Max in Where the Wild Things Are is sent to bed without supper because
of his temper. Mickey in In the Night Kitchen investigates an unknown
noise at night. Ida in Outside Over There has to rescue her little
sister, who has been kidnapped to become a goblin bride. In each, the
children make mistakes and do very little that's spectacular to the
adult eye--but ultimately, the children's courage and arrogance hold out
and get them out of messes that are largely of their own creation.

The controversy caused by these books is hard to imagine living decades
after they helped to change children's books, but they were very real at
the time. Opponents of Wild Things said of it, "This is not a book you
leave in the presence of sensitive children to find in the twilight."

This statement is actually the best illustration of what Sendak's life
work achieved. Wild Things was precisely the kind of book a sensitive
child would eat up in the twilight, fright and all. It gives a truer
sense of the power that a child has within themselves than any parental
lecture possibly could.

The controversy surrounding Outside Over There was in the same vein,
though lessened because it was released well after Sendak had become an
award-winning author and household name.

In the Night Kitchen, however, remains among the most banned books in
the U.S. because of the nudity of the main character Mickey. But
Mickey's nudity was part of his defining moment--part of finding your
voice and the courage to defend what's yours.

Sendak called the controversy pure idiocy and reaction. Had concerned
citizens truly been concerned, they may have decided to take on the most
subversive element of the story, which was a rugged defense of eating
cake for breakfast!

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THOUGH THESE three books tower over everything else he wrote, Sendak's
work continued up until his death. Books like We're All in the Dumps
with Jack and Guy, about homeless children living on the streets with
people who have AIDS; Bumble-ardy, about an orphaned pig who didn't have
a birthday party until he was 9; and Brundibar, his collaboration with
Tony Kushner based on an opera performed by Jewish children in the Nazi
Theresienstadt concentration camp; showed his continued commitment to
his guiding ethic of treating children with respect and giving them art
that was not didactic, but invigorating.

With the rash of celebrity children's books by the likes of John
Travolta (Propeller One-Way Night Coach: A Story) and Jay Leno (If Roast
Beef Could Fly) Maurice Sendak's death leaves a vacuum in an important
genre that is being filled by unmitigated garbage.

Years ago, during a speech for the Friends of University of Southern
California Libraries, Sendak said, "It's 1993, and children get shot on
the way to school, children contract AIDS, children are in the most
vulnerable position imaginable...If we don't look and if we don't listen
and if we don't do something, kids will be lost."

With the suicides of bullied gay children and the murderous rampage of
racist thugs, both in and out of uniform, we can see why children would
seek comfort and courage in Sendak's land, where horn-headed, fanged,
wild monsters rule. After all, it's so much like home.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Published by the International Socialist Organization.
Material on this Web site is licensed by SocialistWorker.org, under a
Creative Commons (by-nc-nd 3.0) [1] license, except for articles that
are republished with permission. Readers are welcome to share and use
material belonging to this site for non-commercial purposes, as long as
they are attributed to the author and SocialistWorker.org.

[1] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0


--
Dan Clore

New book: _Weird Words: A Lovecraftian Lexicon_:
http://tinyurl.com/yd3bxkw
My collected fiction, _The Unspeakable and Others_:
http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/the-unspeakable-and-others/6124911
Lord We˙rdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

"Tho-ag in Zhi-gyu slept seven Khorlo. Zodmanas
zhiba. All Nyug bosom. Konch-hog not; Thyan-Kam
not; Lha-Chohan not; Tenbrel Chugnyi not;
Dharmakaya ceased; Tgenchang not become; Barnang
and Ssa in Ngovonyidj; alone Tho-og Yinsin in
night of Sun-chan and Yong-grub (Parinishpanna),
&c., &c.,"
-- The Book of Dzyan.










0 new messages