How To Read Literature Like a Professor (Sex Chapters 16-17)
- zachwhite1997
- Jul 14, 2014
- 1 min read
Sex...Sex...Sex...
The assumption of sex can be found almost everywhere, from Ancient Grecian theater portraying giant phallic symbols, to Disney movies ambiguously referencing it. Autors, writers and directors are the most perverse beings on the planet. The Wizard of Oz, for me, is one of the most sexually explicit movie adaptations of a book I've seen. The book tells the tale of a small, young Dorthy; but the movie protrays a women. Think about it, a lonely teenage farm girl who doesn't get much attention, doesn't have parents, and is always surrounded my men (the farm hands), what could happen? I'll tell you what happened, Dorthy decides to have a wet dream about the farm hands. When she enters Oz she attains a sexy pair of red heels which are clearly to old for her, but she wears them any way. Along the way she has men practically throwing themselves at her, giving her "lollipops", asking for some "brain", she even lubes up the Tinman and makes him nice and hard (note how wobbley he was before). The she meets her gay best friend the Lion. Lion is afraid to truely be himself (calls himself a dandilion), so they after their journey, she clearly has a thing going on with the Scarecrow who, as i mentioned before, wanted some "brain." He got it too, in the end Dorthy hates to say goodbye, but the live of a tramp isn't for everyone. She wakes up with several people in her room who do not need to be there. Thus, I say The Wizard of Oz is about sex and sexuaity.
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