Telling children's stories : narrative theory and children's literature
著者
書誌事項
Telling children's stories : narrative theory and children's literature
(Frontiers of narrative)
University of Nebraska Press, c2010
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 293-302) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The most accessible approach yet to children's literature and narrative theory, Telling Children's Stories is a comprehensive collection of never-before-published essays by an international slate of scholars that offers a broad yet in-depth assessment of narrative strategies unique to children's literature. The volume is divided into four interrelated sections: "Genre Templates and Transformations," "Approaches to the Picture Book," "Narrators and Implied Readers," and "Narrative Time." Mike Cadden's introduction considers the links between the various essays and topics, as well as their connections with such issues as metafiction, narrative ethics, focalization, and plotting. Ranging in focus from picture books to novels such as To Kill a Mockingbird, from detective fiction for children to historical tales, from new works such as the Lemony Snicket series to classics like Tom's Midnight Garden, these essays explore notions of montage and metaphor, perspective and subjectivity, identification and time. Together, they comprise a resource that will interest and instruct scholars of narrative theory and children's literature, and that will become critically important to the understanding and development of both fields.
目次
Introduction
Mike Cadden
Part 1. Genre Templates and Transformations
1. Telling Old Tales Newly: Intertextuality in Young Adult Fiction for Girls
Elisabeth Rose Gruner
2. Familiarity Breeds a Following: Transcending the Formulaic in the Snicket Series
Danielle Russell
3. The Power of Secrets: Backwards Construction and the Children's Detective Story
Chris McGee
Part 2. Approaches to the Picture Book
4. Focalization in Children's Picture Books: Who Sees in Words and Pictures?
Angela Yannicopoulou
5. No Consonance, No Consolation: John Burningham's Time to Get Out of the Bath, Shirley
Magdalena Sikorska
6. Telling the Story, Breaking the Boundaries: Metafiction and the Enhancement of Children's Literary Development in The Bravest Ever Bear and The Story of the Falling Star
Alexandra Lewis
7. Perceiving The Red Tree: Narrative Repair, Writerly Metaphor, and Sensible Anarchy
Andrea Schwenke Wyile
8. Now Playing: Silent Cinema and Picture-Book Montage
Nathalie op de Beeck
Part 3. Narrators and Implied Readers
9. Uncle Tom Melodrama with a Modern Point of View: Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird
Holly Blackford
10. The Identification Fallacy: Perspective and Subjectivity in Children's Literature
Maria Nikolajeva
11. The Development of Hebrew Children's Literature: From Men Pulling Children Along to Women Meeting Them Where They Are
Dana Keren-Yaar
Part 4. Narrative Time
12. Shifting Worlds: Constructing the Subject, Narrative, and History in Historical Time Shifts
Susan Stewart
13. "Whose Woods These Are I Think I Know": Narrative Theory and Diana Wynne Jones's Hexwood
Martha Hixon
14. "Time No Longer": The Context(s) of Time in Tom's Midnight Garden
Angelika Zirker
Further Reading
Contributors
Index
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