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Dr. Seuss Influence On Children

Decent Essays

During his time in the war, Dr. Seuss learned so many things, uncovered so many talents, that he didn’t really know how and when to use them. He tried several different career options before he finally settled: he wrote articles for Life magazine, monthly children’s story for Redbook, submitted advertising concepts for Ford Motors, created film strips, drew political cartoons for The New Republic, lectured on children’s literature and produce animated cartoons.

After the war came the post war “Baby Boom.” According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the birth rate increased dramatically from 2.49 to 3.77 between 1945 and 1957. The number of children ages 0-4 went from 11,000,000 to 16,410,000 and continued into the sixties were it peaked 20,000,000. The number of children under the age of nineteen rose from 51 million to 69 million. Nevertheless, the number of adults age ranging from 20-64, had also increased, …show more content…

Seuss retake writing children’s book after seventeen years? Was the concept of family being reinvented to a child-centered family? How is it possible that such an icon of the children’s literary world had the ability to connect to kids across generations without having children of his own? How could they understand kids without raising them?

Dr. Seuss felt that the propaganda he produced “had failed to instill democratic principles in adults whose prejudices were already determined by education and upbringing” (Pease, 2010, p.73). We're bombed with persuasive messages on a constant basis, sometimes by paid advertisers and other times by groups looking to forward their interests. The people behind these messages all have on idea in mind: convince the audience they are messaging to agree and adopt their belief as their own, and reject everyone else’s point of view. According to Paul Myron Anthony Linebarger “Propaganda consists of the planned use of any form of public of mass-produced communication designed to affect the

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