- The Dot and the Line
"The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics" (ISBN 1-58717-066-3) is a book written and illustrated by
Norton Juster , first published byRandom House in1963 . The title is a reference to "" byEdwin Abbott Abbott .In
1965 , famed animatorChuck Jones and theMGM Animation/Visual Arts studio adapted "The Dot and the Line" into a 10-minute animated short film forMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer , narrated byRobert Morley . "The Dot and the Line" won the 1965Academy Award for Animated Short Film . Five years later, Jones turned another Juster book into an animated feature film, "The Phantom Tollbooth".The cartoon was released as a special feature on the "
The Glass Bottom Boat " DVD in 2005. The cartoon is also featured on the 2008 release of "Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Academy Awards Animation Collection"tory
This is the anguished tale of a sensible straight line who falls in love with a dot. The dot, however, finding the line stiff, dull, and conventional, turns her affections toward a wild and unkempt squiggle. Though dejected, the line was not without determination, and, after much concentration, managed to bend himself, giving rise to shapes so complex he had to letter his sides and angles to keep his place. Before long he was able to express himself in any shape he wished, from helices to spider webs to
Paul Klee 's little jester. Overwhelmed by the line's geometric contortionistic prowess, the dot realized that what she had seen in the squiggle to be freedom and joy was nothing more than chaos and sloth.Thence, the line and the dot lived "if not happily ever after, at least reasonably so." The story ends with a punning moral: "To the vector belong the spoils ."The story, in Juster's words, "is a romance destined to take its place among the immortal works of our literature. But is it merely a poignant and exquisite evocation of an eternal theme? A sensitive, soul-searching examination of an essential problem? Or is it rather, in these uncertain times when man stands alienated from the very meaning of life itself, more like a beacon—a shaft of light illuminating a path to some higher understanding? We doubt it."
Trivia
* To give the squiggle in the animated cartoon adaptation an unkempt appearance, the animation drawings were inked on
rice paper . The ink bled, creating a textured line that was then Xeroxed onto cel.External links
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmSbdvzbOzY Animated The Dot and the Line on YouTube]
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