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      Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers
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      Book

      Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      DOI link for Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers book

      The Past through Modern Eyes

      Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      DOI link for Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers book

      The Past through Modern Eyes
      ByKim Wilson
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2011
      eBook Published 23 June 2011
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203808092
      Pages 228
      eBook ISBN 9780203808092
      Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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      Wilson, K. (2011). Re-visioning Historical Fiction for Young Readers: The Past through Modern Eyes (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203808092

      ABSTRACT

      This study is concerned with how readers are positioned to interpret the past in historical fiction for children and young adults. Looking at literature published within the last thirty to forty years, Wilson identifies and explores a prevalent trend for re-visioning and rewriting the past according to modern social and political ideological assumptions. Fiction within this genre, while concerned with the past at the level of content, is additionally concerned with present views of that historical past because of the future to which it is moving. Specific areas of discussion include the identification of a new sub-genre: Living history fiction, stories of Joan of Arc, historical fiction featuring agentic females, the very popular Scholastic Press historical journal series, fictions of war, and historical fiction featuring multicultural discourses.

      Wilson observes specific traits in historical fiction written for children — most notably how the notion of positive progress into the future is nuanced differently in this literature in which the concept of progress from the past is inextricably linked to the protagonist’s potential for agency and the realization of subjectivity. The genre consistently manifests a concern with identity construction that in turn informs and influences how a metanarrative of positive progress is played out. This book engages in a discussion of the functionality of the past within the genre and offers an interpretative frame for the sifting out of the present from the past in historical fiction for young readers.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |8 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|26 pages

      Living History Fiction: A Past to Excite the Senses

      chapter 2|28 pages

      Perceptions of Reality: Joan of Arc in Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      chapter 3|40 pages

      Agentic Heroines: Reinscribing Female Selfhood in Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      chapter 4|24 pages

      Shaping Identities: Constructing National Character in the Scholastic Press Historical Journal Series

      chapter 5|32 pages

      Memory and Power: Discourses on War in Historical Fiction for Young Readers

      chapter 6|30 pages

      Rewriting the Past: A Historical Multicultural

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