The Science of Oz (original) (raw)
While there have been attempts to explain the science in series like Star Trek and Star Wars, and even something called The Science of Discworld (although I believe that actually is more about the science of OUR world, using a Discworld plot as a background), I don’t know that there’s been any comprehensive effort to look at the science in the Oz books. Perhaps this is because they’re fairy tales written in the early twentieth century, so they don’t come off as too scientifically valid today, but I get the impression that L. Frank Baum did try to incorporate as many scientific discoveries of his own time as he could. He even made a foray into science fiction with The Master Key: An Electrical Fairy Tale, although that fell into the common trap of using a principle that we know exists but don’t fully understand to explain his devices. Back then it was electricity, but later materials have done much the same with radiation, black holes, dark matter, and so forth. Bits of what we now call science fiction that made their way into the Oz books themselves include:
- The idea that walking on air is possible in the underground Vegetable Kingdom because the attraction of gravity is weaker near the center of the Earth. This is a good example of an actual fact being used to support pure fantasy.
- Tik-Tok, sometimes considered the first robot in literature, although that’s not actually true. Still, he was an early example of mechanical man with an actual personality, and it would be interesting to look at how much of him is scientifically grounded and how much just imaginary. One complaint I’ve seen about him is that, while he needs to be wound in order to operate, it doesn’t appear to take a whole lot of force to wind him to the point where he’s ready to go for hours.
- The Square-Meal Tablets, sort of the follow-up to similar food substitute pills in The Master Key, but without the statement that they’re electrically charged. These pills provide the nutritional equivalent of a three-course meal, but nobody seems to like them much. Even the Shaggy Man, who extols their virtues in The Patchwork Girl of Oz, is back to his customary apples in Tik-Tok. And when their inventor, Professor Wogglebug, tries to get his students to eat them instead of food, they throw him into a lake.
- Speaking of pills, I’m not sure there’s any scientific background to the Education Pills, but they might still be interesting to examine in that light.
- The Horners‘ use of radium for decorative and medical purposes, from a book written before the element’s harmful effects were known. Also, in Glinda, the title character claims that Gaulau is “more wonderful than even radium.”
- The tube through the Earth in Tik-Tok. I have to wonder if Shaggy’s observation that the acceleration due to gravity is enough to avoid getting stuck at the center of the planet is accurate. This is especially curious in light of Quox, who controls his own speed and has his claws scraping against the side of the Tube, yet has no problem reaching the other side. Another interesting item involving the Tube is that, according to the plaque on it, it was “Burrowed and built by Hiergargo the Magician, In the Year of the World 1 9 6 2 5 4 7 8 For his own exclusive uses.” Based on what I know of epochs and such, when the world was about twenty million years old, it still wasn’t cool enough for life to survive. How old DID people think the world was in Baum’s time? Or are we to believe that “Year of the World” doesn’t actually mean how many years it had been since the planet came into existence?
- Queen Coo-ee-oh’s submerging island, with its fleet of magical submarines.
You could find even more material by delving into Baum’s non-Oz fantasies (John Dough and the Cherub has a flying machine, synthetic diamonds, and an anti-gravity device) or the post-Baum Oz books, but this is enough to start with. This isn’t something I would be fit to work on, but I have to wonder if anyone would be interested in expounding upon these ideas.
This entry was posted in Magic Items, Oz and tagged dorothy and the wizard in oz, education pills, forbidden tube, gaulau, glinda, glinda of oz, gravity, hiergargo, horners, john dough and the cherub, l. frank baum, ozma of oz, professor wogglebug, queen coo-ee-oh, quox, radium, robots, science, science fiction, shaggy man, skeezers, square-meal tablets, star trek, star wars, the master key, the patchwork girl of oz, the science of discworld, tik-tok, tik-tok of oz, vegetable kingdom. Bookmark the permalink.