I tweet for the trees (The Lorax)
Objective Review:
A key scene of the 2012 film of the Lorax is the reveal of Audrey’s
accurately painted trees on the back of her family’s house, and her dream of having
her own natural wonder, despite never having seen a tree herself. There’s a
story there as well. It is the irony of her dream, which is not altruistic, but
rather a selfish desire to own and enjoy. This motivation to bring back trees
is seeded from the same selfish behavior that originally wiped the existence of
trees from Thneedville.
A second key scene is when Ted’s mother says” “You’d rather
have some dirty, messy, lump of wood that just sticks out of the ground and
does what? What’s its purpose?” Thneedville has become an artificial world
that has supplanted natural resources with manufactured products. Ted and his
family are not unique in their blinders. This scene draws alarming parallels to
our modern consumer culture. A viewer might wonder how someone could ever
question the purpose of tree, only to look up and see their own LED tree lamp
next to the television.
The catalyst for change is the third important element. It
is the irrational and unpredictable nature of human behavior. All houses can
look identical, and marketing can influence consumerism, but we cannot predict
how one another’s lived experience may influence the decisions of others. As
Mary Parker Follet’s law of the situation explains, our interactions with each
other shape who we are
Reaction:
I grew up with the 1972 Lorax film, so the principal theme
of the movie was anticipated. I could recall the sadness I felt as a child, and
the warning to not be mindlessly wasteful and instead aspire to each become
a Lorax. It was a lesson to be against the clear-cutting monsters destroying our
rainforests. I primarily associated the
film as a first introduction to environmental concerns, and the concept of corporate
greed and wastefulness. In short, it was inspiration to champion recycling efforts within the classroom, and be the stewards of our
natural resources.
In this new 2012 film, anxiety and shame have replaced the duplicity of sadness and a childhood call to action. I see my own material laden life as a parallel. I have turned a blind eye to harm simply by ignoring the ramifications of extraction. My lifetime is marked by the normalcy of product creation. Humans buy bottled water because it’s healthier and tastes better, we have air purifiers that contribute to energy usage that pollutes our air. The distance from the source also separates us from their value. Eggs do not come from a chicken in my yard, they hail from mass producing poultry farms that create pandemics and reduce the animal to be a product, not a part of a natural ecosystem. The film leaves me with a sense of dread; even if trees are restored and the creation of things ceased, there will be, yet another human-created path of detrimental destruction under the guise of efficiency and progress.
Interpretation
System theory provides a mechanism to better understand how
Thneedville became so naively artificial. The theory can be used to analyze how
Thneedville shifted so deeply to manufactured commodities and why there is
complete ignorance about the state of the land outside of their immediate environment.
System theory demonstrates that slow, stable
changes, can eventually create new epistemological understandings of society
Considering systems (inputs, throughputs,
and outputs) evolve based on feedback
Deep unease comes from the realization that this isn’t just
a humorous and animated film. Needing bottled air due to pollution is frighteningly
like having bottled water as a substitute for unsanitary local water. The Lorax
may be a fictional story, but these overlapping systems are very, very real. It
is this realization that the film fills me with dread. Our current level of
consumerism will require major paradigm shifts to enact change.
References
Montuori, A. (2011). Systems Approach. Encyclopedia
of Creativity, 414-421.
Shrivastava, P. (1985). Corporate Strategy. The
Journal of Business Strategy, 5(3), 103-111.
Stout, M., & Love, J. M. (2015). Integrative
Process: Follettian Thinkin from Ontology to Administration. Process
Century ress.
Stout, M., & Staton, C. M. (2011). The Ontology of Process Philosophy in Follett’s Administrative Theory. Administrative Theory & Praxis, 33(2), 268–292.
Tracy I really like your reaction to the film, specifically how in-depth you went. I had a similar reaction to the film, I think most people do, but I think you did a great job in explaining your views. I also really enjoyed your interpretation of the film. I analyzed at the Thneed system so it was really enjoyable to see how Mr. O'hare's system worked and what you thought about it.
ReplyDeleteTracy, I appreciate your observation that something as simple as the selfish desires of a single individual can have an impact on an entire paradigm and permanently alter a social system. That hint of optimism makes me wonder how we address the drastic changes needed as you expressed in your last paragraph. Perhaps I am simply not as optimistic, but I fear that the actions of a few individuals may not have the paradigm-altering affect that we witnessed in the Lorax. Some greater form of social change is necessary - I suppose I'm just not quite sure where that change might originate, if at all.
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