Monday, January 17, 2011

The Essay

The posting of this essay was slightly delayed, but here it is, in all its glory.

Hitler's Turtle Descendant
The fear and cooperation of the turtles in Dr. Suess' Yertle the Turtle which was caused by Yertle’s rise to power in Sala-ma-Sond closely parallels the fear and cooperation present during Hitler’s reign in Germany. Yertle has the turtles stack themselves underneath him so he can see more of his surroundings (he is under the impression that he is “ruler of all that he sees” [Dr. Seuss]), ignoring the turtles’ discomfort, in the way Hitler ignored the plight of the German people with the aim of conquering and ‘cleansing’ the world. Both Yertle and Hitler had unattainable goals, and weren’t afraid of using people in their attempts to attain them. Mack, the little turtle on the bottom of the stack, protests to the oblivious Yertle. This parallels the few resistance groups in Germany, like the White Rose [Hornberger]. The other turtles in Yertle’s stack represent the other Germans, who believed Hitler would make everything right in Germany. When this belief was shattered, they were too scared to oppose him. Life in Yertle’s turtle stack was not pleasant, and neither was life in Nazi Germany [McDonough].

A dictatorship requires one person and one party to be in control. It also requires a climate of fear – this was provided by the Nazi police, or the Gestapo. Once secured in his position of power, Hitler eliminated the personal freedom of the people of Nazi Germany and kept them under his control though state terrorism and censorship of all opposition to him and his regime. The Gestapo ensured the compliance of the people by intimidation, and Gestapo law meant their activities were free from any review by courts of law. They did as they pleased. Anybody suspected to be a political threat was arrested. People were believed to be employed in each street and building complex to spy on the people and report them to the authorities. The tiniest mistake could lead to arrest. Upon being arrested, one was forced to sign an order for protective custody and then sent to a concentration camp [History]. The camps were deliberately barbaric and acted as an example to the German people, who were well aware of their presence in Nazi Germany. They did not speak out against them and constantly feared for their personal well being.

Along with the mental abuse of Germany, the conquered countries were starved and exploited by Hitlers policy of Lebensraum (living space). Conquered countries were forced to provide Germany with cheap goods and their people were abducted and used as slave labourers, with Germany abducting a total of about twelve million people [USHMM]. Many of these workers died as a result of their poor living conditions or mistreatment. Even pre-war, slave labour was not uncommon. Undesirables (the homeless, homosexuals, criminals, communists, Jews, and political threats) were sent to day labour camps [USHMM], and this practise only grew as the war progressed.
Similarly, Yertle manages to instill a fear in the turtles of his pond, intimidating them with his position of power (as the Turtle King) and forcing them to stack themselves underneath him (although not with the radical methods Hitler so loved like concentration camps and police brutality, as this is a children's story). The turtle’s compliance and the way in which Yertle's exploits them parallels the state of the German people under Nazi rule. Yertle secures himself a position of ultimate power and, through intimidation and at the expense of the turtle’s physical well being, he rises higher and higher on their backs. "I've pains in my back and my shoulders and knees. How long must we stand here, your Majesty, please?" [Dr. Seuss]. Mack (the bottom turtle) complains many times during the time that Yertle is in power, mirroring the plight of the German people. Regardless as to the discomfort of the people, Hitler and Yertle kept ploughing forward.

Yertle is clearly representative of Hitler - they both share unrealistic goals, which eventually lead to their downfalls. King Yertle, the king of Sala-Ma-Sond, fell from the top of the turtle hill and into the mud, while Hitler ended up comitting suicide because his empire was falling. Hitler wanted to take over the entire world. Yertle did too.
After World War One, Hitler was angered by Germany's defeat. The proceeding Treaty of Versailles further angered him, and lead him to take complete control of Germany and retaliate against the world. Hitler's army of Nazis were set to invade neighbouring countries of Austria, then Czechoslovakia, and soon seven more countries followed in a pattern of greed.

While Yertle didn't have this type of grudge, he had the same thirst for more that Hitler had. Everything in Sala-ma-Sond was fine "Until Yertle, the king of them all, decided the kingdom he ruled was too small," writes Dr. Suess. Upon seeing the many different landmarks such as cows, mules, bushes, King Yertle wanted to be ruler of more, just like how as Hitler conquered each country, he wanted to conquer even more.

While resistance was strongly suppressed in Nazi Germany, it did still exist. Individuals, political parties, and labour organizations all fought to protect Germany from Hitler and Nazism. Resistance activities included everything from refusing to salute to assassination attempts of Hitler and other high-ranking Nazi officials. Another area of protest was the distribution of pamphlets and newspapers reporting the real news (as opposed to the state papers, which churned out propaganda from the Nazi party) or calling for the public to oppose Hitler [McDonough]. The publishing of these ‘illegal’ papers is quite like what Mack tried to do in Yertle the Turtle. Mack tried to tell Yertle about the real situation, he tried to protest the starvation and pain the turtles were facing, but each time he was simply told to be quiet and stay put, which is the more child-friendly alternative to executions and disappearances [Hornberger].

One such group was the White Rose. The group was made up students of the Munich University, including Hans and Sophie Scholl, Christoph Probst, Willi Graf, Alexander Schmorell and their psychology and philosophy professor Kurt Huber. The group distributed a total of six pamphlets highlighting Nazi crimes and denouncing Hitler. The first was circulated simply around the university campus, but later pamphlets were distributed and mailed around the country [Lisciotto]. These young people are similar to Mack in that both they and Mack started out believing in and trusting their leader, and as their belief and trust died, they peacefully protested, by speaking out [Hornberger]. It cannot be said that these six pamphlets had a catastrophic effect on Hitler, in the way Mack’s burp had a catastrophic effect on Yertle, but the pamphlets did reach many people, and quite possibly ‘woke’ some citizens to the cruelty of the Nazi regime. Sadly, the story of the White Rose did not end in the members seeing freedom. On February 2, 1943, Hans and Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst were executed, and later on that year, Willi Graf, Alexander Schmorell, and Kurt Huber were also executed [Hornberger].

Germany was eventually liberated from Hitler, like Yertle was eventually cast down into the mud. Unfortunately, the Germans' suffering was more real and more radical than the mistreatment of the turtles. The Germans also had heightened consequences if they tried to fight back [McDonough]. Mack was only told to be quiet, but the members of the White Rose were executed [Lisciotto]. Hitler's goal was never achieved, and neither was Yertle's. “All the turtles are free, as turtles and, maybe, all creatures should be” writes Dr. Seuss to end his tale. Thankfully, neither Hitler nor Yertle conquered the world.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

January 13, 2011 - Contact has yet to be established.

One has to wonder what Jesse is doing at this moment in time. Maybe drinking a fruity drink? Basking in the sun? Exploring caves? You'll have to ask him when returns to Ottawa, as he is not resonding to emails and has yet to send over his annotated bibliography. This does nothing to lower Dorothy and Isabel's stress levels, but they do still love him and will manage to forgive him in time.

For Dorothy and Isabel, the past two days have inolved lots of stressing and typing. The essay is complete and in the final editing stages. Two thirds of the annotated bibliography have been sourced and typed up. To Jesse's credit, the cartoon was finished a long, long time ago and has not been stressed over since. Once the in text citations have been plunked in where they belong, this essay will be complete and ready to hand in.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

January 12, 2011 - Cartoon



This would be our editorial cartoon. Drawing credits to Jesse. We are very proud of him :)

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

January 11, 2011 - We have an essay!

As the title may suggest, we now have a full essay, complete with a conclusion, an introduction, and three body, mini-essays. It is extremely long. And in the process of being edited. If Jess would email me back, that would be great! Anyhow, Isabel did a major edit today, while Dorothy worked on her bibliography. Reading over Isabel's edits tonight, Dorothy has decided Isabel's format of writing her section (one paragraph about the actual information, then one paragraph about how it connects to Yertle) shall be the format from now on. She will re-write her bit at some point tonight, and Isabel and Dorothy will deconstruct Jesse's part and re-write it for him. Sorry, Jess. Oh, and we just realized we have to do in-text citations. That will take another half hour to figure out... oh well, this is why you read the assignment sheet before you write the essay.

January 10, 2011 - Printer

Now that we've sort of split off to write and edit ( and Jess has really split off) we're not discovering as much, or discussing as much. Isabel and Dorothy started with a quick discussion about what we needed to get done (finish and edit our individual paragraphs) and then went and typed away at computer screens. Not too much of new. The major event of the day? Dorothy almost having a breakdown because the printed wouldn't work. Then Mr. Blauer stepped in and magically saved the day. Thank you, Mr. Blauer. We also started on our annotated bibliography, and also remembered that we have to do in-text citations. Work, work, work...

Oh. We also discovered the our piece is already over 1000 words, and we haven't included all of Isabel's piece, or the conclusion. We need to cut this down.

Monday, January 10, 2011

January 9, 2010 - Weekend

We didn't meet up at all this weekend, but we all researched and wrote our separate portions.

Jesse: He wrote on the plane, comparing Yertle and Hitler. He did something interesting in comparing specific lines in the poem or story to specific events.

Isabel: She pointed out the basically Hitler completely suppressed all forms of resistance in Germany, leaving very little room for even the smallest forms of resistance.

Dorothy: She researched the White Rose group, comparing them to Mack in particular.

Our next task will be to combine all these separate parts and edit out all the overlapping.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

January 7, 2010 - Farewell, Jesse!

Today was our last day with Jess, as he left right after lit class for Belize. We hope he has fun and enjoys the warm weather! Dorothy and Isabel will shiver in the snow and go skating, since the canal opens tomorrow.

We have officially finished our editorial cartoon. We opted to go for a very Dr. Seuss-like cartoon, complete with Dr. Seuss turtles ande even using a line from Yerlte the Turtle. We shall see if we can get Mr. Blauer to scan it on Monday, so we can post it here.

We also reviewed our research today, since it was our last in-person discussion as a full group. Isabel posted the link to the Cambrige paper she found in the comments section of yesterday's post, if anyone needs to find it. Nothing much has changed in our ideas for the essay, and we plan to have all the body paragraphs written for Monday (Jess will email us his) and Isabel and Dorothy will write the concluding paragraph and begin major editing. Something we realized is that there's a good chance we will end up overlapping topics, so that will be a major thing to watch out for in editing. Have a good weekend!

Thursday, January 6, 2011

January 6 2011 - Editorial Cartoons and Introductions

The title says it all. Today was productive. Really productive. Jesse had finished the cartoon, and was just finishing the ink tracing as we discussed thesis statements and introductory paragraphs. The cartoon is pretty amazing. We'll post an image once we've got the words written in. Essay-wise, we've come to the conclusion that we have enough information and enough comparaisons to write ten essays. We've decided to focus on three strands: Dorothy will write about the German resistance movements (particularly the White Rose group) in comparaison to Mack, Isabel will write about the complacency of the Germans and their general fear of Hitler in comparaison to the rest of the turtles, and Jess will write about Hitler's unrealistic goals and ignorance of the plight of the people in comparaison to Yertle. We also have a rough thesis statement:

       The fear and complacency caused by Yertle the Turtle's rise to power in Sala-ma-Sond quite accurately mirrors the fear and blind belief caused by Hitler's reign in Germany, and by facism in general.

A little rough, but that's the basic idea for our essay. Isabel has found a study done by Cambrige University about German resistance, and that will hopefully be one of our primary sources, along with several museum sites and other academic papers.

Tonight, we all plan to start in-depth research of our specific strands, and hopefully to start writing. Since Jess is leaving on Friday (tomorrow) right after class to go to Belize, he will probably do most of his writing on the plane, and email back and forth with Dorothy and Isabel in cold, cold Ottawa.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

January 5, 2010 - A Quiet Afternoon

As the title might suggest, today was rather quiet. After a short discussion deciding what to do, we split up. Jesse went to work on our cartoon, which is coming along quite nicely, and, in Dorothy and Isabel's opinions, is quite powerful. Dorothy and Isabel researched away all through today, reading about interesting things including but not exclusively: The White Rose movement, the several attempts to assasinate Hitler, the surprising (and slightly scary) complacency of the German people, the aristocratic resistance, the communist and democratic party resistance, and the largely unorganized non-compliance and small acts of sabotage that encompassed most of Germany's resistance. Tonight will include more independance research, and by tomorrow, we should be able to write our introductory paragraph together, and then break off into small groups to each write a body paragraph (or a series of body paragraphs about one topic).

We have decided to focus our essay specifically on the comparaisons with German resistance to facism and Hitler, since Yertle the Turtle only talks about one pond, it doesn't mention other ponds being conquered, and those turtles 'resisting'. Yes, there were many large and sophisticated resistance operations in other occupied countries, but we can't research everything, and we think that this story does specifically relate to German resistance and complacency, simply because the pond is the homeland of the turtles, and Yertle is their leader, and the only reason they resist is 'moral decency', or to protect themselves, they are not fighting to protect their homeland from invaders. The same is true for the German resistance. The few that resisted resisted because they felt something was wrong, not because they were trying to liberate their country.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

January 4, 2010 -Afternoon

Today was successful. Our discussion today centered around our thesis statement. We were a bit confused originally, thinking we had to write an essay comparing the points in Yertle the Turtle to elements in the second World War, and then use these comparaisons to prove a point. Confusing, right? Mr. Blauer cleared that up, explaining to us we're actually writing an essay pointing out the comparaisons between the Dr. Seuss book and the real life event of the second World War.

A helpful thing in this project is that both Isabel and Jesse are currently taking history, and did study WWII, and therefore know plenty about the basic facts of the war. Some interesting things we noted today, after reading the story over again:
-The story starts off by saying the pong was clean and neat. But Yertle falls into mud, not into clean water. Did the water muddy, over time, with all the turtles trampling over to make Yertle's throne? Or did Dr. Seuss just create a patch of mud for Yertle to fall into? The mud could be connected to the way Germany's economy and general well0being did not get too much better in Hitler's time, in fact, it got worse (bombings, major war).
-Both Yertle and Hitler had untrealistic goals: Yertle's was to be higher than the moon, Hitler's was to conquer the world.
-The turtles (with the exception of Mack) all blindly listened to Yertle, the way many Germans blindly listened to Hitler. We think this is because both Yertle and Hitler talked big. Yertle said, "Hey, I can be king of everything!" and the turtles thought, "Well, if he's king of everything, we'd better obey him". Hitler said, "I can conquer the world, and make life better for all of those 'deserving of life'" and the Germans thought, "Well, that sounds better than what we have now, so let's go with it." Later on, neither turtles nor Germans had no choice but to obey, since Yertle and Hitler because rather all powerful.

Those are just some of the connections we're starting to see. With a little more solid research, we should be ready to start writing soon. We should also have a thesis statement written and ready to go by tomorrow.

Monday, January 3, 2011

January 3, 2011- Afternoon


We had our first informal discussion today in class. Not formal, but informal. It's a start.

We have decided that, officially, our essay will be about how Hitler used people to get what he wanted, and this eventually led to his downfall. In Hitler's insatiable lust for more and more land, he stopped caring, or even acknowledging, the little people who he was trampling and using to get what he wanted. This forgetfullness eventually led to Hitler being defeated, and landing in metaphorical mud, just like Yertle. Except Yertle's mud what quite real, and, well, muddy.

We also want to look at how the turtles (or citizens) so blindly followed Yertle's (or Hitler's) orders, even when one of their own, Mack, was complaining quite bitterly about his head being stepped on. And yes, while many of the citizens weren't complacent when faced with the Third Reicht, very many were. This is in part because of Hitler's brainwashing, but mostly because of the total and complete terror that Hitler and his Nazis' induced.

Things we need to research:
-The countries Hitler conquered
-The effect of occupation of the citizens (find examples of complacency)
-The blind faith of many citizens
-How using people with no regard for them eventually toppled Hitler

And an interesting note: Hitler 'occupied' or conquered, nine countries (not counting Germany).  In Yertle the Turtle, Yertle first orders nine turtles to swim and create his throne. Coincidence? Or not?