vovat: (Kabumpo)
[personal profile] vovat
For Black Friday, let's leave the hectic world of consumerism, and turn to a magical fairyland where they don't use money. Or do they? While money does show up in the first few Oz books, by the time of The Road to Oz, Baum seems to have considered the lack of money to be an important part of his fairyland (perhaps due at least in part to his own financial failures and extravagant vacations). In The Emerald City of Oz, we learn that Oz is basically a communist country that actually works, with all surplus goods being put into Ozma's storehouses, and redistributed to whomever needs them. Money is still used in Jinxland in The Scarecrow of Oz, but that's an out-of-the-way country where Ozma's influence hadn't yet permeated. Ruth Plumly Thompson, on the other hand, did have some parts of Oz still using money, although it was more common for inhabitants of Oz to do a sort of informal bartering. Gold and jewels seem to be valuable for trading, despite the fact that they're usually presented as quite common there. Then again, it's not like our money has any real intrinsic value; it's a way of keeping score. And hey, gold and jewels are pretty, right?

Turning to another author's Oz works, a pre-publication draft of Eloise Jarvis McGraw's The Forbidden Fountain of Oz included a footnote detailing the currency of Oz. This footnote was edited out of the finished book, but I think it's as good a guide as any to Ozian money. And even in this footnote, it's stated that merchants will generally give away anything that someone really wants or needs but can't afford, so the socialist system isn't totally abolished.

If you want to find out more about Ozian money, check out the books at the Public Library of Oz. Or if you don't have the good fortune to live within easy access of the Emerald City, Eric Gjovaag wrote a Baum Bugle article that covers the subject in great detail. I forget which issue it's in, and I believe my Bugle back issues are in storage right now, but I'm sure it wouldn't be too hard to find.

Re: Trivia

Date: 2008-11-30 01:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vovat.livejournal.com
That would be Fi Nance, Queen of Down Town. The Scarecrow was also briefly stuffed with paper money, but he wasn't made entirely of it.

Re: Trivia

Date: 2008-12-02 06:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ozma914.livejournal.com
I'd forgotten about the Scarecrow being stuffed with money. What a rich character he was.

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