One of the books that I have been
reading during my self-imposed Disney themed summer reading is Walt and the Promise of Progress City by
Sam Gennawey. This book offers an
in-depth look at the urban planning aspects of Disneyland as well as what EPCOT
was supposed to be before it was turned into a theme park. Originally, EPCOT or Progress City was
Walt Disney’s attempt to create a highly functioning, well-planned city in
which people could live, work, and play.
The Epcot that we have today has a World Showcase and a Future World,
but it is not the city that Walt had envisioned for his Florida Project. Gennawey’s book provides an interesting
look at the ways in which Walt Disney eventually came to the decision that he
wanted to create his original idea for an Experimental Prototype Community of
Tomorrow.
One
aspect of the book that really impacted me is a section about the ways in which
Disneyland is so successful because it provides visitors with “the architecture
of reassurance.” Gennawey writes
that “by eliminating the visual contradictions [in Disneyland], Walt had
created a world that existed within the earthen berm that surrounded the park
that was safe and clean. What he
created was not a place about fantasy but a place about a sense of reassurance”
(126). This sense of
reassurance is what makes Disneyland or the Magic Kingdom feel so much like
home. We feel safe there. John Hench noted that “Disneyland
offered an enriched version of the real world, but not an escapist or unreal
version” (Gennawey 127).
Disneyland is a very real place, but it is better than our everyday
reality because it is the best version of what reality can be. There is no graffiti, no trash lining
the streets because the Disney Imagineers have “program[med] out all the
negative, unwanted elements” (Gennawey 127). This is the kind of world in which I would rather live,
hence my many trips to Disney World.
Gennawey
goes on to discuss the ways in which Walt responded to people criticizing his
park as a place of fantasy, somewhere that is just so unreal or juvenile. Walt felt that “You know the fantasy
isn’t here [Disneyland]. This is
very real . . . The Park is reality.
The people are natural here; they’re having a good time; they’re communicating. This is what people really are. The fantasy is out there, outside the
gates of Disneyland, where people have hatreds and people have prejudices”
(Gennawey 127). I know this seems
like an optimistic view of people, but perhaps that is the problem with the
world in its current existence.
Too many people see other people as a threat or something to be feared
and hated. People lose those
prejudices when they enter Disneyland.
They are there to have fun and spend time with family. Maybe we all need to look harder to see
the best in people.
Overall,
Gennawey’s book is excellent, and it is easy to read. There are some technical terms with regard to urban design,
but he does a good job of defining these terms and making them relevant to his
discussion of Disneyland and EPCOT.
This book is a combination of history and a very technical look at what
led Walt to his desire for a Progress City, a place where everything could be
clean and regulated as well as what influenced Walt in the creation of Disneyland. There is also discussion about the many
different World’s Fairs that impacted the Disney Company and led them to
further develop their abilities to create theme park environments. The book is well researched and
includes an extensive bibliography that could also lead you to other history
related Disney books. Sam
Gennawey’s book can be purchased on Amazon in paper or eBook version. This is definitely a book to add to
your Disney reading list. Until
next time, have a magical day, and keep moving forward!
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