
J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan in and Out of Time: A Children's Classic at 100 (Children's Literature Association Centennial Studies): 4
Author(s): Donna R. White (Editor), Anita C. Tarr
- Publisher: Scarecrow Press (UK)
- Publication Date: 27 April 2006
- Language: English
- Print length: 368 pages
- ISBN-10: 0810854287
- ISBN-13: 9780810854284
Book Description
The first section is comprised of essays placing Barries in its own time period, and tackles issues such as the relationship between Hook and Peter in terms of child hatred, the similarities between Peter and Oscar Wilde, Peter Pans position as an exemplar of the Cult of the Boy Child is challenged, and the influence of pirate lore and fairy lore are also examined. Part two features an essay on Derridas concept of the grapheme, and uses it to argue that Barrie is attempting to undermine racial stereotypes. The third section explores Peter Pans timelessness and timeliness in essays that examine the binary of print literacy and orality; Peter Pans modular structure and how it is ideally suited to video game narratives; the indeterminacy of gender that was common to Victorian audiences, but also threatening and progressive; Philip Pullman and J.K. Rowling, who publicly claim to dislike Peter Pan and the concept of never growing up, but who are nevertheless indebted to Barrie; and a Lacanian reading of Peter Pan arguing that Peter acts as the maternal phallus in his pre-Symbolic state. The final section looks at the various roles of the female in Peter Pan, whether against the backdrop of British colonialism or Victorian England. Students and enthusiasts of childrens literature will find their understanding of Peter Pan immensely broadened after reading this volume.
Editorial Reviews
Review
…academic readers will find this book useful.
Academic libraries that support the scholarly study of children’s and Edwardian literature will want this multifaceted study…
The combined work of the book’s eighteen contributors…exemplifies not only how this children’s classic continues to fascinate young readers, but why
Peter Pan is also a surprisingly-often shockingly-adult story.This collection of essays featuring contributions by young, mostly American scholars marks the centenary of the first publication of the play
Peter Pan (1904).This new centenary collection provides appropriately rich and protean responses to its subject, the most fruitful of them investigating the textual, narrative, and linguistic challenges presented by the many-faceted and multiple versions of
Peter Pan. Donna White and Anita Tarr deserve our thanks for compiling an exemplary collection of essays….Peter Pan in and out of Time exhibits the richness and variety that can come with maturity, in this case, critical maturity. At the same time that this essay collection provides a fitting tribute to the durability of the Peter Pan mythos and the complex of desires and fears it encodes, it also provides entertaining, incisive, and useful ways of understanding this complex of texts.About the Author
C. Anita Tarr is an associate professor of English at Illinois State University, where she teaches children’s and young adult literature with additional specialties in fantasy and science fiction, poetry, and women’s studies.
Donna R. White teaches young adult literature, linguistics, science fiction and fantasy, and writing at Arkansas Tech University.
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