Victorian children's literature : experiencing abjection, empathy, and the power of love
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Victorian children's literature : experiencing abjection, empathy, and the power of love
(Critical approaches to children's literature / series editors, Kerry Mallan and Clare Bradford)
Palgrave Macmillan, c2016
Available at / 4 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-184) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book reveals how the period's transforming identities affected by social, economic, religious, and national energies offers rich opportunities in which to analyze the relationship between identity and transformation. At the heart of this study is this question: what is the relationship between Victorian children's literature, its readers, and their psychic development? Ruth Y. Jenkins uses Julia Kristeva's theory of abjection to uncover the presence of cultural anxieties and social tensions in works by Kingsley, MacDonald, Carroll, Stevenson, Burnett, Ballantyne, Nesbit, Tucker, Sewell, and Rossetti.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
1-Introduction: Emerging Identities and the Practice of Possibility
2-Imagining the Abject in Kingsley, MacDonald, and Carroll: Disrupting Dominant Values and Cultural Identity in Children's Literature
3- Gender, Abjection, and Coming of Age: Games, Dolls, and Stories
4-Constructing the Self: Connection and Separation
5-Giving Voice to Abjection: Experience and Empathy
6-Engendering Abjection's Sublime: Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden
7-Embodying Herethics: Rossetti's Speaking Likenesses
Conclusion-Abjection's Sublime: Imagining Love
Notes
Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"