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      Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature
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      Book

      Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature

      DOI link for Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature

      Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature book

      The Power of Story

      Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature

      DOI link for Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature

      Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature book

      The Power of Story
      ByCaroline Webb
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2014
      eBook Published 8 October 2014
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315858111
      Pages 176
      eBook ISBN 9781315858111
      Subjects Language & Literature
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      Webb, C. (2014). Fantasy and the Real World in British Children's Literature: The Power of Story (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315858111

      ABSTRACT

      This study examines the children’s books of three extraordinary British writers—J.K. Rowling, Diana Wynne Jones, and Terry Pratchett—and investigates their sophisticated use of narrative strategies not only to engage children in reading, but to educate them into becoming mature readers and indeed individuals. The book demonstrates how in quite different ways these writers establish reader expectations by drawing on conventions in existing genres only to subvert those expectations. Their strategies lead young readers to evaluate for themselves both the power of story to shape our understanding of the world and to develop a sense of identity and agency. Rowling, Jones, and Pratchett provide their readers with fantasies that are pleasurable and imaginative, but far from encouraging escape from reality, they convey important lessons about the complexities and challenges of the real world—and how these may be faced and solved. All three writers deploy the tropes and imaginative possibilities of fantasy to disturb, challenge, and enlarge the world of their readers.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |22 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|25 pages

      Harry Potter and Tiffany Aching

      chapter 2|28 pages

      The Case of Heroic Fantasy

      chapter 3|21 pages

      Ontologies of the Wainscot

      chapter 4|22 pages

      Representing the Witch

      chapter 5|24 pages

      Resisting “Destinarianism”

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