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How a Classic Children’s Book Introduced Kids (and Adults) to Their Inner Demons | Monstrum

As a kid, the monsters in Where the Wild Things Are were downright frightening. But thinking about the book as an adult, it’s clear there’s something deeper to this fantastically monstrous story. For audio descriptions, go to Settings - Audio Track - English Descriptive. ***** PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateStoried ***** Written and Hosted by: Dr. Emily Zarka Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Executive Producer: Dr. Emily Zarka Producer: Thomas Fernandes Editor/Animator: Jordyn Buckland Illustrator: Samuel Allan Executive in Charge (PBS): Maribel Lopez Director of Programming (PBS): Gabrielle Ewing Additional Footage: Shutterstock Music: APM Music Descriptive Audio & Captions provided by The Described and Captioned Media Program Produced by Spotzen for PBS Digital Studios. Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/monstrumpbs

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As a kid, the monsters in "Where The Wild Things Are" were downright frightening. But thinking about the book as an adult, it's clear there's something deeper to this fantastically monstrous story. In the book, the unruly Max is confronted with the wild things, a group of misfit monsters that are grotesque and scary, living in a world straight from Max's imagination. The wild things are his own demons made physically monstrous. Maurice Sendak's "Where The Wild Things Are" is born from his own ch
ildhood memories and is a meditation on confronting fear. But don't worry, I'm not going to ruin more of your childhood today, I promise, but I am going to show you how monsters have a place in all stages of our lives. [bright upbeat music] I'm Dr. Emily Zarka, and this is "Monstrum." Initially banned in many American libraries for being too frightening, "Where The Wild Things Are" forged a new path for children's literature by acknowledging that it's okay for kids to experience fear and darknes
s. This now beloved classic has only ten sentences in the entire book. Sendak considered himself an artist, not just an illustrator or just an author. This feels evident in the book where he relied heavily on images to tell the story. The words feel sparse and thoughtfully selected by design. The plot begins with young, rebellious Max running amuck at home; chasing the dog with a fork, making a fork where he shouldn't, sassing his mother with, "I'll eat you up!" And for this insolence, he's sent
to bed without supper. In Sendak's illustration of Max's banishment, it's easy to see Max feels this punishment is unfair. While he contemplates this affront, a forest grows in his room and Max rides a boat to an island populated by the horned, clawed and fanged wild things. There Max shows no fear of the monsters. Tamed in awe by his lack of fear and unblinking stare, the wild things crown him king. Max and the wild things engage in a wild rumpus before he sends them off to bed without supper.
Feeling lonely, Max leaves the island and returns to his bedroom where supper sits waiting for him, still warm. Published in 1963, "Where The Wild Things Are" was critically praised. It won the prestigious Caldecott Medal, an award for the most distinguished picture book for children. But despite its acumen, the book was also met with controversy. Readers felt that Max's unruly behavior set a poor example for children, and the wild rumpus might inspire children to behave badly-- dancing under t
he moon with monsters, the horror. In my opinion, those critical of the book were missing the subtext and Sendak's refusal to turn a blind eye away from the dangerous, emotional, and physical experience it is to be a child. This was a truth he knew all too well. Sendak grew up amidst the Great Depression and World War II. The son of Polish immigrants who often hosted and housed relatives who escaped the Nazis in Europe, although not all of his family was so lucky. He spent a lot of time as a chi
ld, somewhat lonely, for lonely watching other kids play outside. Sendak spoke about his childhood saying, "I knew terrible things "but I knew I mustn't let adults know I knew. It would scare them." His own mother would call him Vilda Chaya, the Yiddish version of Wild Child or Wild Thing. Sendak hated much of his mother's cooking, which meant he often went to bed without eating. It's not a far leap to see "Where The Wild Things Are" as a therapeutic reflection of Sendak's own relationship with
his mother. Sendak asserted that children need fantasy to process disturbing emotional situations. He said Max discharges his anger against his mother and returns to the real world, sleepy, hungry, and at peace with himself. I'm glad I'm not the only one to see the potential in monsters. And the monsters in the book themselves, Sendak said they were inspired by his older relatives. They would often tell him, he looked so good, we could eat you up, a line he borrows for the book. But what inspire
d their appearance? A voracious reader, Sendak also created illustrations for books other than his own, including books of folklore and fairytales. Some of these wild things look like classical monsters we might recognize from other monster texts and mythology, or at least they do to me. This one could be a serpentine sea beast or dragon. Here we have the Minotaur and the griffin. Might be a stretch but these two even remind me of the chimera when they are first introduced. But we can't forget a
bout the littlest monster of the story, Max. Max is testing his boundaries and having big feelings. His banishment is an opportunity for him to contemplate his own actions. His wolf suit symbolizes his animal nature, which as the story goes on, becomes his monstrous nature. It conjures up the legends and accounts of feral children left the mercy of the wilderness without adult supervision. The choice of a wolf over other animals seems significant. Wolves are perceived as very threatening, partic
ularly for children. Often in literature and werewolf lore, they eat or threaten to eat people, especially children. The threat of cannibalism, one of humanity's greatest taboos, is present although in a really subtle, lighthearted way. Max threatens his mother with, "I'll eat you up," the monsters later threatened to consume Max saying, "We will eat you up, we love you so." While this doesn't seem to be a cannibalistic threat, at first glance, being imaginary monsters at all, if we read the cre
atures as representations of Max's own inner emotions and identity, then the doom of self cannibalism lingers in the moonlight. Threats aside, I think Max's wolf suit ironically also represents his freedom. Unburdened by the demands of adulthood and responsibility, he's freed to roam and roar and imagine. Max can see and feel things others cannot, he represents the best parts of childhood. But to the adults in his life, he represents the worst parts of a child, stirring up ruckus and scaring eve
n the monsters with his wildness. The through line of the story is really Max's mother, the one who presumably sewed his wolf costume in the first place. She also gave him the name Wild Thing and took away his dinner only to have it waiting again at the end of the story. Her control lets the reader, adult or child alike, know that Max's behavior is ultimately supervised. He's safe at home, physically and mentally. Given the complex layers of metaphor and symbolism to the story, not to mention it
s popularity, it's not surprising the book would be adapted into other mediums. First, there was the opera. Yes, an opera. In 1980, Sendak collaborated with composer Oliver Knussen on the opera. The wild things are made larger than life with impressive costumes conceived by Sendak himself that made their performers appear nine to 12 feet tall. The opera would become a TV movie a few years later. In the early 2000s, Sendak began developing a film adaptation at Universal and approached legendary d
irector, Spike Jonze. Jonze was initially hesitant, but his eventual enthusiasm for the story and openness to taking it in a new live-action direction was met with gusto by Sendak. While Sendak was thrilled by the new creative direction of the film; Universal, not so much. Nervous about it being too dark for a children's movie, the film rights went to Warner Brothers, who were also wary, but nonetheless completed the film in 2009. When the film was finally released, it was critically praised and
publicly fear mongered, just like Sendak's book. Some claimed it was too violent and too scary for kids, leading to debates about whether or not exposing children to Max's story was harmful. I'm gonna leave it to Sendak to respond. In an interview after the film's release, when asked what he would say to parents who think the film is too scary, Sendak said, "I would tell them to go to hell. "That's a question I will not tolerate. "This concentration on kids being scared "as though adults can't
be scared. Of course, we're scared." He went on to elaborate that art should contain elements of fear since it reflects truth. Noting that he heard horrible stories from his relatives and watched horrendous movies not made for kids. "So what? "I managed to survive," he said. Throughout his career, Sendak insisted that "Where The Wild Things Are" was not just a children's book but a book for everyone, and it should be marketed as such. He believed firmly in his art and the story's potential to sp
eak to the truths of childhood's terrible things, and his work aimed to speak to the child within everyone, including himself. His work is notable for taking on the darker and more complicated emotions a child experiences in a way that they understand and a way that can help adults understand them. In "Where The Wild Things Are," he uses monsters. Max's wild things are personal demons, the desire for violence, for wanting to scream and roar, to be angry and destructive, defiant and independent.
These urges are felt by most kids in general, but just like Max, they have to learn to tame them. Childhood is not only mysterious and powerful but the reality is that it can also be terrible. We don't ever fully grow out of all those childhood fears and desires, especially when we see them in the real world every day. But luckily for us, with monsters, we have a way to explore these terrors together. So, yeah, am I saying you should read books with monsters to kids? Absolutely. Adults, too. ...
collaborated with Composer Oliver Knussen on the opera. We're gonna have to look up the pronunciation of that word. (Crew Member) Yeah. Knussen? Tussen. Tussen with a Knussen. Accessibility provided by the U.S. Department of Education.

Comments

@PokhrajRoy.

A bunch of riled up adults talking about how children’s should be wholesome and pure and not show bad behaviour? Nice to know nothing has changed 🌝

@GiacomodellaSvezia

"Where the Wild Things Are' is visionary. Edit: The book's range may be broader than at first glance, I think it also addresses trauma, at whatever age.

@Fairyslash

Considering how popular 'mascot horror' is among kids nowadays, I don't think anyone would claim its too creepy nowadays, haha!

@CorwinFound

I loved this book for my first son (now 28) and have given it to just about every young child among family and friends. Yes, it's dark. Life for kids can be dark. It addresses hard feelings like anger, helplessness, fear of abandonment. Pretending that kids should only have happy and positive media is a direct insult to their lived understanding of the world.

@popdebris

My mother’s master’s thesis was about Maurice Sendak, and she spent a week with him to discuss his monsters. I didn’t realize as a small child that the drawings of monsters in our downstairs library were actually Sendak originals. I was able to have wonderful conversations with my mother about this book once I got old enough to understand.

@crowjane2168

Something similar happened with “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” when I was young. There are folks who cannot be made to see the value in letting kids confront fear in safe ways (possibly because they weren’t afforded the experience themselves) and their predictable response is to ban the things that scare them.

@kimberlyterasaki4843

It's kinda hilarious how we have this perception of kids being innocent when kids revel in the taboo/forbidden and will often seek out the strange and frightening for themselves. I had an elementary student tell me her favorite movie is SCREAM (1996). Kids like monsters and scary things, whether parents want to admit it or not.

@DeRien8

Yeah, I got the "escapism out of frustration and anger to release emotion" relation to the book a lot as a kid. The personified emotions trying to "eat you up" hits harder as an adult.

@glockenrein

Roald Dahl, Coraline, every classic fairytale ever… there are many great scary, violent or gross stories for children. Kids aren’t unfinished adults, they have complicated emotions of their own and they deserve emotionally rich stories. It’s the parents’ job, like Max’ mother, to guide their kids and keep them save on that journey.

@pandoraeeris7860

Wild Thing's and Max's Purple Crayon were two of my favorite books as a child.

@mocockah

I’m a Brazilian English teacher, and in one of our many literary presentations I adapted this book into a musical. Some parents were worried, some were confused, but all of them loved to see their little monsters sing in English.

@hatjodelka

I was given this book when it was first published in the UK and I loved it. There was a very limited moral panic about it. Mostly from people who hadn't even seen it and didn't have children. The Brothers Grimm had very scary and gruesome stories. Red hot iron shoes, being ripped to pieces inside a barrel of spikes etc.

@alltheagents

I love how the illustrations in the book start small and then get bigger and bigger until the full page climax, then taper off and get smaller again until the end when he's back in his room. I think that shows that his fantasy world is more real and vivid to him than his normal life.

@johnopalko5223

Maybe I'm weird (no, scratch that; I know I'm weird), but I always thought the monsters in the book seemed friendly and a lot of fun. I never read it as a kid because I was eight when it was published and a little old for it but I did read it as an adult and enjoyed it immensely. If I were Max, I wouldn't want to leave.

@PokhrajRoy.

7:32 THE CLAPBACK! UGH LOVE IT ❤

@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980

This was one if my favourite books as a kid. Thanks for doing it justice.

@qarljohnson4971

I enjoyed the Spike Jonze movie version of "Where the Wild Things Are" when I realized that it was all about using Max's journey to help children identify & consciously feel their always shifting emotional states. Something also that many adults (formerly kids) may have missed out on in their childhoods as well.

@Shatterpath

I loved this book so much as a kid that my 77 year old mother still comments on it today! She tells me that we went through multiple copies from reading it so often at bedtime. I remember walking into a comic shop in my 20s and the utter joyous shock that someone had made action figures of Max and the Wild Things. I found the money to take them home and still treasure them, decades later!

@qawamity

There is strong symbolism in the monsters crowning the boy king. It basically is a statement about self-control. He is the one in charge of his fears and impulses, not the other way around.

@lilbasenji1

I remember reading this book as a child. While I want to respect everyone’s parenting choices it upsets me how books awarded or not are disappearing from shelves due to sensitive parents. I get scared super easily, but even I wouldn’t want to extinguish a child’s desire to read if I thought the book was scary or show bad behavior. Heck I was watching animal documentaries showing animals hunting and devouring them when I was in elementary school and I didn’t try to hunt other people. We can’t protect children from everything and that should not be feared. Honestly this is hurting authors and the kids more than anything.