These ruby slippers support the Freudian theory even further. One aspect is that Dorothy does not seek out the ruby slippers, but rather finds them on her feet. Glinda puts them there magically without Dorothy's consent. Another thing is that menstruation cannot be stopped, and this means that Dorothy will have to learn to live with menstruation forever. Glinda tells Dorothy, «There they are and there they'll stay.» In Dorothy's case, as well as with probably almost all girls, these changes in her body are scary and she looks at them as a kind of curse. All the ruby slippers have gotten Dorothy at the beginning is persecution from an evil witch. By the end of the dream though, Dorothy has worked through the mystery of the ruby slippers and is ready to go home. In order to go home, she needs but to click the slippers together three times while reciting, «There is no place like home.» Interestingly enough the last image of Oz is of the ruby slippers, and the only way back home is for Dorothy to ritually acknowledge them.
Though to many a strict Freudian view is bizarre, it is something that stills needs to be looked at. In The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy goes to Oz to work out anxiety brought on by witnessing the primal scene between her two parental figures. She also is experiencing many changes within herself that she needs to deal with. Dorothy's return to Kansas is marked by a new sense of sexuality and femininity, as well as a better understanding of herself. Dorothy returned home ready to participate fully in the adult community
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Freud’s Oz