Issue Details: First known date: 2008... vol. 18 no. 2 December 2008 of Papers : Explorations into Children's Literature est. 1990 Papers : Explorations into Children's Literature
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 2008 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Haunted Histories : Time-slip Narratives in the Antipodes, Claudia Marquis , single work criticism

Marquis analyzes works from Australia, New Zealand and the U.K. to suggest that time-slip fiction "for all its pleasure in the historical moment, articulates anxiety that puts the present into question, not so much child's play as games of the dark" (63). Her discussion of Ruth Park's Playing Beatie Bow claims that the novel seems to 'guard against the recognition of a problematic colonial past' (63), through the constrcution of a 'complicated family history' which Marquis argues, serves to occlude the larger colonial history of relations between the settlers and the indigenous population, who 'barely rate a mention' (61). Here, Marquis draws upon the work of Clare Bradford, who she says, 'has repeatedly shown this is a history of invasion, accommodated by white authors in a variety of textual moves that in general discount the singularity of the aboriginal experience and the historical depth of their relation with the land' (see Bradford, 1997). Marquis argues that the narrative dynamic obscures this local history through a 'double anchoring of the legitimate past in a European moment' and the ways it invests the domestic order - the love story - with irrestible power (61). She proceeds with a comparative analysis of Spirits of the Lake by New Zealand author Beverly Dunlop claiming that ''the absence of the indigene seems more noteworthy [if read] alongside another novel that is equally concerned with home and family' (61).

(p. 58-64)
Note:

Sighted: 28/03/18

Flights of Fantasy? or, Space-Time Compression in Asian-Australian Picture Books, Trish Lunt , single work criticism
Lunt looks at how 'diasporic experiences are negotiated across time and space' (65) in the picture books A Year of Pink Pieces and Old Magic. The analysis looks specifically at 'the ways in which hybridsed space operates as a function of power and subjectivity central to the project of mediating narratives about Asian-Australian diasporic cultures' (65). As a method for interpreting the 'negotiations of space, place and identity in the global passage of peoples and cultures' (69), Lunt takes into consideration the positionings, flows and folds of personal connections made in both texts by focusing on the images of kites and streamers as 'fluid hyphens' that 'make connections between worlds conceived otherwise as separate and distinct' (69). She argues that both texts 'navigate the arbitrary stasis of cultural boundaries' and make it possible 'to conceive the ways in which disaporic connections transcend space and time' through the akcnowledgement of 'multiple registers and negotiations (renegotiations) of space, place, identity and power relations' (69-70).
(p. 65-70)
Note:

Sighted: 28/03/18

Behind the Bum : A Psychoanalytic Reading of Andy Griffiths' Bum Trilogy, Alice Mills , single work criticism
In this paper Mills considers 'the trilogy's fondness for anal jokes and bums from three perspectives, those of Mikhail Bakhtin, Julia Kristeva and Sigmund Freud' (78). While the texts comply with Kristeva's concept of abjection and Bakhtin's notion of the carnivalesque to a certain extent, it is Freud's theory of childhood psychosexual development that Mills finds is the most useful. She tracks the stages of Freud's Oedipal complex through the trilogy and based upon her analysis of 'the bum fighting adventures of Zack and his allies' (81), concludes that 'behind the bum adventures lies a far more terrifying psychological terrain' (84).
(p. 78-84)
Note:

Sighted: 28/03/18

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 28 Mar 2018 13:49:27
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