![]() ![]() Both authors make the point as to what stories like this can do to how young minds see the other. “Was I aware of those distinctions as a child? Did I learn to admire the rich from reading the book? Did I also learn about the inferiority of creatures from the jungle (people included)?"ĭorfman, perhaps the most outspoken critic, has made similar arguments in his book: The Empire’s Old Clothes: What the Lone Ranger, Babar, and Other Innocent Heroes Do to our Minds. "In Babar the reader learns that there are different classes of people and the Rich Lady is of the better class and that elephants are not as good as people, but might be if they imitate people,” Kohl writes. Kohl is the author of Should We Burn Babar? In the book, he makes several valid points demonstrating how Europeans, and Babar now Europeanized himself, are made superior to the other animals in the jungle. This third title about Babar and his family follows the elephants as they build a magnificent city: Celesteville. ![]() ![]() Herbert Kohl and Ariel Dorfman make the most notable arguments against Babar, stating he is nothing more than colonialist propaganda. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |