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Marxist Commodification In 'The Wizard Of Oz'

249 Words1 Pages
Marxist's process of commodification is very evident in The Wizard of Oz where both the Woodman and Scarecrow embody workers who are compelled to surrender to the capitalists' social mandatory array of conventional life by losing their personalities in being governed by socioeconomic circumstances or the social infrastructure where the subordination to capitalism's rules is a necessity and is understood in monetary values. For instance, Oz won't help Dorothy and her companions since "everyone must pay for everything he gets" (66). By the end of the story, we clearly know that Oz is a humbug and he made use of them by employing their private matter's to subordinate to his capitalism logic. In this logic, Dorothy and her company can be re-conceptualized
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