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Deszcz-Tryhubczak, Justyna – Children's Literature in Education, 2020
This article employs the theory of social minds proposed by Alan Palmer ("Social Minds in the Novel," 2010) to argue for the emergence of a group-based thinking, feeling, and acting focused on reforming the status quo, using David Whitley's Agora trilogy (2009--2013) as an example of Radical Fantasy. This particular subgenre of fantasy…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Social Change, Fantasy, Groups
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Wang, Cathy Yue – Children's Literature in Education, 2020
Situated within the changing economic and political contexts of China's modernization and globalization, children's fantasy novels prove to be apt vehicles for exploring the plights and challenges that women and girls face in the new millennium in China. This article provides a feminist critique of two contemporary Chinese children's fantasy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Novels
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Yoon, Sarah – Children's Literature in Education, 2020
This article argues that food acts and eating in the nineteenth century children's novel "The Coral Island" (1858) reveal adult socializing intentions in the context of an expanding British Empire. Written during a transitional historical moment, R. M. Ballantyne's "The Coral Island" communicates to middle- and upper-class…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Power Structure, Foreign Countries, Food
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de Rijke, Victoria – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
Russell Hoban died in December 2011. In this article, Victoria de Rijke celebrates this mysterious writer's huge contribution to children's literature over 52 years; a career which began and ended with two mythological books: "The Mouse & His Child" (1967) and "Soonchild" (2012). Published in "CLE" over…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Authors, Mythology, Fantasy
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Palkovich, Einat Natalie – Children's Literature in Education, 2015
Mothers are essential facilitators of early Theory of Mind development and intrinsic to the acquisition, as well as the content, of many basic schemas learnt in infancy. In this article it is argued that the "mother" schema in children's literature can ease a child's transition into literary discourse by exploiting the child's…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Mothers, Psychological Patterns
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Cheetham, Dominic – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
The impetus for the incredible variety found in the modern literary dragon is commonly seen to stem from the creative genius of either E. Nesbit or Kenneth Grahame. However, examination of dragon stories in the late nineteenth century shows that several different authors, on both sides of the Atlantic, were producing similar stories at about the…
Descriptors: Nineteenth Century Literature, Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Folk Culture
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Grace, Deborah – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
Written before the successful publication of Skellig (1998), David Almond's short story collection, "Counting Stars," has attracted less critical attention than his more famous novels. Falling between fiction and autobiography, the earlier short stories are more firmly grounded in realism than the novels, which feature elements of…
Descriptors: Fiction, Autobiographies, Literary Genres, Fantasy
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Bray, Danielle Bienvenue – Children's Literature in Education, 2015
As Amanda Diekman and Sarah Murnen (2004) note, studies of "nonsexist" children's books tend to focus on girls performing stereotypically masculine behaviors without consideration of how boy characters perform gender (p. 381); however, this narrow focus on girl figures in the identification of nonsexist works has two side-effects:…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Females, Sex Stereotypes, Gender Differences
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Potter, Troy – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This paper explores the representation of magic and madness in Justine Larbalestier's "Magic or Madness" trilogy (2005-2007). Throughout the series, magic is constructed as an abject and disabling force that threatens to disable magic-wielders, either through madness or death. Despite being represented as a ubiquitous force, the…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Novels, Fantasy, Mental Disorders
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Jarvis, Christine – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
Stephenie Meyer's "Twilight" Saga has achieved extraordinary popularity and scholars have interrogated the nature of its appeal from a variety of perspectives. Its popularity raises questions because in many ways it mirrors romantic fictions from the 1960s and 1970s. Such fictions have been read by critics as expressions of female…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Feminism, Fiction, Novels
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Oziewicz, Marek C. – Children's Literature in Education, 2011
This essay examines restorative justice scripting in "Voices", the second volume of Ursula K. Le Guin's "Annals of the Western Shore." Narrated by a rape-child, "Voices" is the story of an occupied city-state and of how the conquered and the conquerors negotiate a formula for peaceful coexistence. They are able to do…
Descriptors: Scripts, Fantasy, Models, Science Fiction
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Castleman, Michele D. – Children's Literature in Education, 2011
As a narrative series, Brandon Sanderson's humorous, middle grade, Alcatraz Smedry novels display some of the arguably vague concepts of Reader Response theorist Wolfgang Iser as accessible themes that encourage a critical understanding of the stories. "Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians" (2007), "Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener's Bones" (2008) and…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Novels, Childrens Literature, Fantasy
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Cantrell, Sarah K. – Children's Literature in Education, 2010
This article examines the multiple worlds in Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy in light Pierre Bourdieu's "space of possibles" and the combination of chance and choice that impact Lyra and Will's decisions. Rather than viewing chance or destiny as disempowering, this article considers how the protagonists' choices also encourage…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, Childrens Literature
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Clark, Roger; McDonald, Keith – Children's Literature in Education, 2010
This article considers Guillermo Del Toro's "Pan's Labyrinth" as a text which utilises key codes and conventions of children's literature as a means of encountering the trauma of Fascism. The article begins by placing "Pan's Labyrinth" at a contextual crossroads involving fairy tale and a Spanish cinematic tradition and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Political Attitudes
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Valverde, Cristina Perez – Children's Literature in Education, 2009
This paper offers a comparative analysis of two characters belonging to the tradition of empowered "spinster" in children's fiction, namely Mary Poppins and Ms Wiz, from the perspective of gender politics and child/adult interactions. A distinction is made between the figure portrayed in P. L. Travers' texts and the Disney film starring Julie…
Descriptors: Feminism, Comparative Analysis, Gender Issues, Politics
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