The Commercial Appeal

Paper: Kenyan monkey inspired Dr. Seuss’ Lorax

Authors also suggest source for ‘truffula’ trees

- Holly Ramer | ASSOCIATED PRESS JOURNAL TIMES VIA AP

CONCORD, N.H. – The furry orange protagonis­t of “The Lorax” and the “truffula’ trees for which he spoke may have been inspired by specific monkeys and trees in Kenya, according to researcher­s at Dr. Seuss’ alma mater, Dartmouth College.

The 1971 book pits a short, mustachioe­d “sort of man” who “speaks for the trees” against the Once-ler, a greedy industrial­ist harvesting the trees into near extinction. Published just after the birth of the modern environmen­tal movement in the United States, the story has won praise for promoting the conservati­on of natural resources and condemnati­on from the logging industry.

Some have speculated that Seuss was inspired by cypress trees near his California home. But anthropolo­gy professor Nathaniel Dominy suggests the whistling thorn acacia commonly found in Kenya makes more sense, given that Seuss wrote much of the book while visiting a safari club there.

The region also is home to the patas monkey, which, like the Lorax, has orange fur and stands on two feet. And in a paper published Monday, Dominy and his co-authors argue their theory could challenge some traditiona­l interpreta­tions of the text.

The Lorax has been described as an “eco-policeman asserting his authority,” they write. But viewing him as a patas monkey might change that perception given that the species relies on the whistling thorn acacia trees for more than 80 percent of its diet.

“A lot of people criticize the Lorax and say he’s too angry, he’s too upset, that his rhetoric is problemati­c and that it’s not the way environmen­talists should be engaging with policy makers or polluting industries,” Dominy said in a recent interview. “Our argument is, no, if the Lorax is based on a living animal that has this tight, coevolved relationsh­ip with a tree, then it’s better to think of the Lorax not as some indignant steward of the environmen­t but as a participat­ing member of the environmen­t. And then this anger is so much more understand­able.”

Joe Fassler, a journalist who once called the Lorax a “bossy, pedantic guilttripp­er” in an article for The Atlantic, said Thursday he imagined the Lorax as neither human nor animal, perhaps a “forest spirit” serving as an outside arbiter.

The new interpreta­tion makes the character much more vulnerable, he said.

“If it was Seuss’ intention to do that, it’s very cool that he left it subtle and not explicit,” he said.

For years, Dominy had seen patas monkeys on his own trips to Kenya and

remarked to others that they looked like something Seuss would create. But he didn’t start researchin­g a possible connection to the Lorax until he started reading the book to his children and struck up a conversati­on with Donald Pease, an English professor at Dartmouth and author of a Seuss biography.

They performed a computer-generated analysis to confirm that the Lorax’s face looks more like a patas monkey than most similar-looking Seussian characters.

The paper published Monday in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution notes that the geographic range of patas monkeys has collapsed in recent decades, in part because demand for the charcoal produced by the trees has grown.

“Such findings suggest that we are witnessing a prophetic example of life imitating art imitating life,” the group wrote, then harkened to the end of the book: “That is, UNLESS …”

 ??  ?? An article by researcher­s at Dartmouth College says the furry orange protagonis­t of “The Lorax” might have been based on the patas monkey. MARK HERTZBERG/THE
An article by researcher­s at Dartmouth College says the furry orange protagonis­t of “The Lorax” might have been based on the patas monkey. MARK HERTZBERG/THE

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