Victoria Flanagan Victoria Flanagan i(A153524 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Not for Children? Victoria Flanagan , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , October 2014;

— Review of Golden Boys Sonya Hartnett , 2014 single work novel
1 The Case for The Ghost's Child by Sonya Hartnett Victoria Flanagan , 2014 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 26 March 2014;

— Review of The Ghost's Child Sonya Hartnett , 2007 single work novel
1 A Similarity or Difference : The Problem of Race in Australian Picture Books Victoria Flanagan , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Bookbird , April vol. 51 no. 2 2013; (p. 13-22)
'The prevailing humanist ideology in fiction produced for children entails that thematic explorations of race usually pivot on the notion that humans are all created equal, regardless of race. However, this position fails to acknowledge the privileged status of whiteness as a racial category. This article examines two recent Australian picture books which explore the relationship between white and non-white identities in an Australian social context, arguing that the construction of whiteness as a normative standard of human experience must be interrogated before genuinely intersubjective race relations can be achieved.' (Author's abstract)
1 Why Theory Matters Victoria Flanagan , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: Jeunesse : Young People, Texts, Culture , Winter vol. 4 no. 2 2012; (p. 151-156)

— Review of Contemporary Children's Literature and Film 2011 anthology criticism

Contemporary Children’s Literature and Film: Engaging with Theory sets out to reveal how theory informs critical interpretations of children’s literature and film. It includes essays from both leading and emerging children’s literature scholars from around the world who examine children’s texts from a plethora of theoretical approaches: John Stephens uses cognitive poetics to demonstrate how picture books model attitudes toward significant social ideologies such as cultural diversity; Clare Bradford and Raffaella Baccolini analyze the representation of space in children’s books and films using a theoretical framework that interweaves cultural geography, postcolonial theory, and utopian studies; Elizabeth Bullen and Kerry Mallan employ cultural theories of globalization to argue that children’s texts provide evidence of a dynamic interplay between the global and the local in their depiction of modern life; Maria Takolander makes a disquieting case about the pervasive Gothic and thus inherently misogynistic construction of femininity in the animated film Monster House; Christine Wilkie-Stibbs furthers this gendered theme in her exploration of transgender subjectivity in a range of young adult fiction and in the excellent French film Ma vie en rose, using a conceptual framework that draws on the theories of Judith Butler and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick; David Buchbinder’s topic is adaptation theory, which he uses to illuminate the relationship(s) between an “original” text and its adaptation(s); and the book closes with Mallan’s chapter on posthumanism and its increasing relevance to children’s literature.' (Introduction)

1 The Struggle to be Human in a Post-Human World Robyn McCallum , Victoria Flanagan , John Stephens , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: CREArTA : Journal of the Centre for Research and Education in the Arts , vol. 6 no. 2006; (p. 28-44)
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