Image for Topologies of the Classical World in Children's Fiction

Topologies of the Classical World in Children's Fiction : Palimpsests, Maps, and Fractals

Part of the Classical presences series
See all formats and editions

Beginning with Rudyard Kipling and Edith Nesbit and concluding with best-selling series still ongoing at the time of writing, this volume examines works of twentieth- and twenty-first-century children's literature that incorporate character types, settings, and narratives derived from the Greco-Roman past.

Drawing on a cognitive poetics approach to reception studies, it argues that authors typically employ a limited and powerful set of spatial metaphors - palimpsest, map, and fractal - to organize the classical past for preteen and adolescent readers.

Palimpsest texts see the past as a collection of strata in which each new era forms a layer superimposed upon a foundation laid earlier; map texts use the metaphor of the mappable journey to represent a protagonist's process of maturing while gaining knowledge of the self and/or the world; fractal texts, in which small parts of the narrative are thematically identical to the whole, present the past in a way that implies that history is infinitely repeatable.

While a given text may embrace multiple metaphors in presenting the past, associations between dominant metaphors, genre, and outlook emerge from the case studies examined in each chapter, revealing remarkable thematic continuities in how the past is represented and how agency is attributed to protagonists: each model, it is suggested, uses the classical past to urge and thus perhaps to develop a particular approach to life.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£85.50 Save 10.00%
RRP £95.00
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198846037 / 9780198846031
Hardback
30/10/2019
United Kingdom
English
288 pages : illustrations (black and white)
22 cm