Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults

The focus of fighting tyranny and the justifications of the consecutive wars in fantasy literature for children and young adults play a noteworthy role in the intertwinement of literature and its educational potential. This genre is filled with numerous images of violence, in particular different sc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kokorski, Karin
Other Authors: Prof. Dr. Thomas Kullmann
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
War
Online Access:https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-202006103100
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spelling ndltd-uni-osnabrueck.de-oai-repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de-urn-nbn-de-gbv-700-2020061031002020-10-28T17:22:16Z Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults Kokorski, Karin Prof. Dr. Thomas Kullmann Prof. Dr. Peter Schneck Children's Literature Young Adult Fantasy Fighting Tyranny Justifications War Harry Potter His Dark Materials The Chronicles of Narnia The Dark Is Rising Inheritance Cycle The House of Night Sangreal Trilogy Villains Ideology Race and Racism Authority Religion Just War Theory Gender Power Structures Morality 17.87 - Besondere Literaturkategorien 18.05 - Englische Literatur 18.06 - Angloamerikanische Literatur ddc:820 The focus of fighting tyranny and the justifications of the consecutive wars in fantasy literature for children and young adults play a noteworthy role in the intertwinement of literature and its educational potential. This genre is filled with numerous images of violence, in particular different scenarios of war and its justifications. In the books war constitutes the final battle between good and evil, and thus manifests the protagonists’ ultimate moral decisions between these two forces. The following books constitute the corpus: C. S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia (1950-56), Susan Cooper’s The Dark Is Rising Sequence (1965-77), Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials (1995-2000), J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series (1997-2007), Christopher Paolini’s Inheritance Cycle (2002-11), Amanda Hemingway’s Sangreal Trilogy (2005-07), and P. C. Cast and Kristin Cast’s House of Night novels (2007-2014). Although not all the books feature wars, all display justifications for war and the imperative to fight tyranny. Located within an intersection of diverse critical theories, my thesis engages literary texts in order to reflect on their capacity to negotiate, challenge, subvert, and perpetuate values and power structures. Motif analysis forms the centre of this analysis. I deploy a varied approach to literary analysis, relying upon literary and cultural theories (especially theories of ideology) to understand the realizations of the different motifs. Through issues of character construction, (political) authority, religion, and the construction of difference, the reader learns much about the culture and values of the respective world. Furthermore, this analysis invites the reader to find parallels between the fabricated world and the real world, and thus transfer what s/he has learned from the texts his/her own world. Engaging in such a reading ensures the drawing of direct connections between the reality constructed in the books on the one hand, and politics, the construction of difference, religion, and just war theory in the reader’s world on the other. The content analysis leads to broader cultural messages, which comprise assumptions about gender, power, ethnicity, religion, and morality. This methodology emphasizes the relevance as well as the complexity of the books and their educative potential, and facilitates the analysis of the books as tools for the defence and perpetuation of Western values and culture. 2020-06-10 doc-type:doctoralThesis https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-202006103100 eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/zip application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Children's Literature
Young Adult
Fantasy
Fighting
Tyranny
Justifications
War
Harry Potter
His Dark Materials
The Chronicles of Narnia
The Dark Is Rising
Inheritance Cycle
The House of Night
Sangreal Trilogy
Villains
Ideology
Race and Racism
Authority
Religion
Just War Theory
Gender
Power Structures
Morality
17.87 - Besondere Literaturkategorien
18.05 - Englische Literatur
18.06 - Angloamerikanische Literatur
ddc:820
spellingShingle Children's Literature
Young Adult
Fantasy
Fighting
Tyranny
Justifications
War
Harry Potter
His Dark Materials
The Chronicles of Narnia
The Dark Is Rising
Inheritance Cycle
The House of Night
Sangreal Trilogy
Villains
Ideology
Race and Racism
Authority
Religion
Just War Theory
Gender
Power Structures
Morality
17.87 - Besondere Literaturkategorien
18.05 - Englische Literatur
18.06 - Angloamerikanische Literatur
ddc:820
Kokorski, Karin
Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
description The focus of fighting tyranny and the justifications of the consecutive wars in fantasy literature for children and young adults play a noteworthy role in the intertwinement of literature and its educational potential. This genre is filled with numerous images of violence, in particular different scenarios of war and its justifications. In the books war constitutes the final battle between good and evil, and thus manifests the protagonists’ ultimate moral decisions between these two forces. The following books constitute the corpus: C. S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia (1950-56), Susan Cooper’s The Dark Is Rising Sequence (1965-77), Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials (1995-2000), J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series (1997-2007), Christopher Paolini’s Inheritance Cycle (2002-11), Amanda Hemingway’s Sangreal Trilogy (2005-07), and P. C. Cast and Kristin Cast’s House of Night novels (2007-2014). Although not all the books feature wars, all display justifications for war and the imperative to fight tyranny. Located within an intersection of diverse critical theories, my thesis engages literary texts in order to reflect on their capacity to negotiate, challenge, subvert, and perpetuate values and power structures. Motif analysis forms the centre of this analysis. I deploy a varied approach to literary analysis, relying upon literary and cultural theories (especially theories of ideology) to understand the realizations of the different motifs. Through issues of character construction, (political) authority, religion, and the construction of difference, the reader learns much about the culture and values of the respective world. Furthermore, this analysis invites the reader to find parallels between the fabricated world and the real world, and thus transfer what s/he has learned from the texts his/her own world. Engaging in such a reading ensures the drawing of direct connections between the reality constructed in the books on the one hand, and politics, the construction of difference, religion, and just war theory in the reader’s world on the other. The content analysis leads to broader cultural messages, which comprise assumptions about gender, power, ethnicity, religion, and morality. This methodology emphasizes the relevance as well as the complexity of the books and their educative potential, and facilitates the analysis of the books as tools for the defence and perpetuation of Western values and culture.
author2 Prof. Dr. Thomas Kullmann
author_facet Prof. Dr. Thomas Kullmann
Kokorski, Karin
author Kokorski, Karin
author_sort Kokorski, Karin
title Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
title_short Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
title_full Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
title_fullStr Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
title_full_unstemmed Fighting Tyranny in Fantastic Literature for Children and Young Adults
title_sort fighting tyranny in fantastic literature for children and young adults
publishDate 2020
url https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-202006103100
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