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    The Edutainer: Walt Disney, Nature Films, and American Understandings of Nature in the Twentieth Century

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2015
    Author
    Roy, Travis Brandon
    Advisor
    Isenberg, Andrew C. (Andrew Christian)
    Committee member
    Lavelle, Peter B.
    Department
    History
    Subject
    History
    Disney Company
    Documentaries
    Environmental History
    Nature
    True-life Adventures
    Walt Disney
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/3501
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/3483
    Abstract
    Throughout much of the twentieth century Walt Disney wielded considerable influence in American culture. By identifying and commercially exploiting a strain of environmental thought that sentimentalized and romanticized nature, Walt Disney influenced the attitudes of millions of Americans concerning how they conceptualized environmental issues. The Walt Disney Company’s nature documentaries and their popularity as both entertainment as well as educational material helped disseminate the virtues of conservation within the American mindset. The Disney interpretation of conservation clashed with other post-war environmental understandings of the ethic, as did the company’s consistently inaccurate representations of nature on film. Disney’s particular strain of environmentalism, based on an Edenic appreciation for nature, the belief that to conserve land it must be developed, and practice of moralizing to humans through anthropomorphized depictions of animal behavior, stood out in contrast to other existing post-war environmental mindsets during the controversy surrounded the proposed construction of a vacation resort in Mineral King, California, following Disney’s death.
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