Home Words: Discourses of Children’s Literature in Canada

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Mavis Reimer
Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, Mar 18, 2008 - Literary Criticism - 275 pages

The essays in Home Words explore the complexity of the idea of home through various theoretical lenses and groupings of texts. One focus of this collection is the relation between the discourses of nation, which often represent the nation as home, and the discourses of home in children’s literature, which variously picture home as a dwelling, family, town or region, psychological comfort, and a place to start from and return to. These essays consider the myriad ways in which discourses of home underwrite both children’s and national literatures.

Home Words reconfigures the field of Canadian children’s literature as it is usually represented by setting the study of English- and French-language texts side by side, and by paying sustained attention to the diversity of work by Canadian writers for children, including both Aboriginal peoples and racialized Canadians. It builds on the literary histories, bibliographical essays, and biographical criticism that have dominated the scholarship to date and sets out to determine and establish new directions for the study of Canadian children’s literature.

 

Contents

The Ideological Work of Canadian Childrens Literature
1
CHAPTER 2 Les représentations du home dans les romans historiques québécois destinés aux adolescents
27
un espace privilégié en littérature de jeunesse québécoise
51
Catharine Parr Traills Canadian Crusoes and the Robinsonade Tradition
67
A Study of Canadian Aboriginal Picture Books by Aboriginal Authors
87
A NonAboriginal Canadian Scholar Discusses Aboriginality and Property in Canadian DoubleFocalized Novels for Young Adults
107
At Home with Multicultural Childrens Literature in Canada?
129
CHAPTER 8 Windows as Homing Devices in Canadian Picture Books
145
Fantasies of Nationhood in Australian and Canadian Texts
177
Translating Scholarly Discourses for Young People
195
Homeward Bound?
225
WORKS CITED
233
CONTRIBUTORS
261
INDEX
265
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Page xvii - It is in culture that we can seek out the range of meanings and ideas conveyed by the phrases belonging to or in a place, being at home in a place.

About the author (2008)

Mavis Reimer is Canada Research Chair in the Culture of Childhood, director of the Centre for Research in Young People’s Texts and Cultures, and an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of Winnipeg. She is co-author with Perry Nodelman of the third edition of The Pleasures of Children’s Literature and editor of a collection of essays on Anne of Green Gables, entitled Such a Simple Little Tale.

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