Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2021

New book release: Young Adult Gothic Fiction



I have an co-edited collection entitled Young Adult Gothic Fiction: Monstrous Selves, Monstrous Others about to be published in June by University of Wales Press. It's packed with wonderful essays from children's literature friends old and new. I've written a chapter with my co-editor Kristine Moruzi on the intersection of fairy tale with YA Gothic, which I think is one of the first takes on the intersection of these three areas.

This collection is the first to focus exclusively on twenty-first-century young adult Gothic fiction. The essays demonstrate how the contemporary resurgence of the Gothic signals anxieties about (and hopes for) young people in the twenty-first century. Changing conceptions of young adults as liminal figures, operating between the modes of child and adult, can be mobilised when combined with Gothic spaces and concepts in texts for young people. In young adult Gothic literature, the crossing of boundaries typical of the Gothic is often motivated by a heterosexual romance plot, in which the human or monstrous female protagonist desires a boy who is not her ‘type’. Additionally, as the Gothic works to define what it means to be human – particularly in relation to gender, race, and identity – the volume also examines how contemporary shifts and flashpoints in identity politics are being negotiated under the metaphoric cloak of monstrosity.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Introduction: Kristine Moruzi and Michelle J. Smith

Section 1: Genre Trouble: Gothic Hybrids

2. Zombies Vs Unicorns: An Exploration of the Pleasures of the Gothic for Young Adults – Patricia Kennon

3. Genre Mutation and the Dialectic of YA Gothic Dystopia in Holly Black’s The Coldest Girl in Coldtown – Bill Hughes

Section 2: Rewriting the Historical Gothic

4. ‘Vanguard taste and fashion spirit’: Feminist Responses to Twenty-First Century, Western Zeitgeist in Vampire Romeo and Juliet texts – Sarah Olive

5. The Pre-Monstrous Mad Scientist and the Post-Nerd Smart Girl in Kenneth Oppel’s Frankenstein Series – Sean P. Connors and Lissette Lopez Szwydky

6. Rock Star Rochester and Heartthrob Heathcliff: The Problematic Redemption of the Byronic Hero in Recent Young Adult Retellings of Brontë Novels – Sara K. Day

Section 3: Gothic Places

7. Monstrous Islands: Spatiality and the Abjection of Motherhood in Gothic Young Adult Fiction – Cecilia Rogers

8. Adolescence Adrift: The Lost Child in Contemporary Australian Gothic YA Fiction – Adam Kealley

Section 4: The Human and the Non-Human

9. Accepting Monsters: The Visual Gothic in I Kill Giants and A Monster Calls – Debra Dudek

10. Unhuman Entanglement: Onto-Ethics and the Fiction of Frances Hardinge – Chloé Germaine Buckley

11. Black and White and Read All Over: Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children, Gothic Imagery and Posthuman Publishing – Jen Harrison

Section 5: Gothic Femininities

12. Testimony from Beyond the Grave: Comparing Girls’ Narratives of Sexual Violence and Death in Gothic Fiction – Lenise Prater

13. Young Adult Gothic Fairy Tales and Terrifying Romance – Michelle J. Smith and Kristine Moruzi



 

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Alice in Wonderland at 150: Why fantasy stories about girls transcend time


John Tenniel, The Nursery Alice
It’s 150 years since an Oxford mathematics don published the most important work of children’s literature and one of the most influential books of all time.

The origins of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland in a story that Charles Dodgson told 10-year-old Alice Liddell and her two sisters while rowing along the Thames in 1862 are well known. What is less understood is why it has become such an enduring cultural touchstone across the globe.

Many popular stories can be distilled to the basic structure of a male hero undertaking a quest. In 1949, Joseph Campbell described the common features of the “monomyth” or hero’s journey that are evident in stories from those of Buddha and Jesus to Luke Skywalker.

In W.W. Denslow's illustrations and L. Frank Baum's
original text, Dorothy is a much younger girl (with 
silver shoes instead of ruby slippers).
Contrary to the dominance of heroic tales of men, there are several iconic narratives of pre-pubescent girls journeying through dream-like fantastic realms that have become enduring phenomena.

Like the ubiquitous Alice, Dorothy Gale from The Wizard of Oz has gained a life of her own beyond L. Frank Baum’s books. The Kansas orphan’s journey into Oz is, if anything, better known through the MGM film starring Judy Garland. The film transforms Dorothy’s journey into nothing but a dream— like Alice’s— inspired by a cyclone-induced blow to the head.

The stories of Alice, Dorothy and more recent girl protagonists in popular fantasies, such as Sarah’s encounters with the Goblin King in the 1986 film Labyrinth, are strongly inflected by fairy-tale tradition. Campbell himself later acknowledged that he “had to go to the fairy tales” in order to bring any semblance of female heroism into The Hero with a Thousand Faces.

As fairy tale scholar Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario explains throughout her work, fairy tales are most often about girls on the cusp of maturation and marriage.

Alice Liddell photographed as a
"beggar maid" by Carroll
In their original book incarnations, however, both Alice and Dorothy are very young girls: Alice is just seven and Dorothy is estimated to be eight. Carroll was notoriously fascinated by pre-pubescent girls, whom he often photographed in staged poses.

The young ages of Alice and Dorothy free them from involvement in a romance plot. In girls’ fiction from the early twentieth century, it was common for adventurous heroines become hastily engaged in the final pages of a novel.

Even more importantly, as girls, Alice and Dorothy occupy a transitional borderland between childhood and adulthood. This also seems to make them more attuned to crossing the boundaries between fantasy and reality.

Whether this capacity derives from the combination of negative assessments of children and females as less rational in comparison with adults and males, or marks girls out as more perceptive and empathetic, is debatable.

What is clear is that these girl heroines take different paths to characters on the typical male hero’s journey. Even within fantastic literature, where anything is possible, there are clear gendered distinctions for protagonists.

As my Deakin colleague Lenise Prater pointed out to me in an important scholarly dialogue on this topic (a Facebook chat thread), female hero quests in fantasy tend to encompass an internal quest that takes place in a dreamscape. In contrast, male heroes enter into literal fantasy worlds; their adventures are supposed to be “real” with the space of the story.

The dreamy adventures of Alice work through or play with some of her waking interests and anxieties. As in Carroll’s text, Tim Burton’s film adaptation explicitly signals that Wonderland is a purely imaginary place. Alice suffers from nightmares about Wonderland as a child, and her father reminds her that dreams cannot harm her and she can “always wake up”.

Judy Garland in a publicity still from 1939
The MGM Oz film changes Dorothy’s journey into a dream through its casting of the same actors in roles in both sepia-toned Kansas and Technicolor Oz. (Farmhands Hunk, Hickory and Zeke appear as the Scarecrow, Tin Man and Cowardly Lion, while neighbour Almira Gulch proves all dog-haters must surely be green-skinned witches.)

As lone questers, girl characters are the most vulnerable and physically weak. Despite their powerlessness in conventional respects, heroines such as Alice and Dorothy are able to survive the dangers posed by people and supernatural beings who possess advantages that are not available to them (adult authority and magic chief among them).

The lives of both Alice and Dorothy beyond their original books by Carroll and Baum suggest a cultural investment in stories about the most vulnerable of people. Alice and Dorothy experience the most amazing of journeys, in which they triumph over the highest forms of authority and power, from queens to witches.

It is reassuring that these stories about girls, who are often overlooked because of their age and gender, are almost universally known. Nevertheless, imagine the possibilities if our most iconic girl characters did not always have to “wake up” at the end of their adventures.

Michelle Smith will be chairing the Making Public Histories seminar on “Melbourne’s Alice” at the State Library of Victoria on 26 November 2015.


The Conversation
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Dorothy and the Resurgence of Oz

Promotional image for Disney's Oz the Great and Powerful
The two most enduringly famous fictional girls are surely Lewis Carroll's Alice and L. Frank Baum's Dorothy. Alice has made her way into countless film and television adaptations of Carroll's novels, as well as recent grittier manifestations in games and comics. (She also features with Dorothy in a sexually explicit graphic novel, Lost Girls.) While Alice is still very closely associated with Carroll's books, even if not a great number of people have read them, Dorothy, and the land of Oz, have drifted further and further from Baum's original series of books. Indeed, it is hard to find current editions of all but the first book, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Books of Wonder's hardcover facsimile editions, while beautiful, are oriented toward adult collectors. There is some scholarly interest in the MGM Wizard of Oz film of 1939 but there is scant research on Baum's Oz, especially in contrast with an abundance of papers on Alice.

It seems, however, that Oz is entering a phase of cultural renewal. In the past decade we have seen the birth of the successful musical Wicked (which debuted in 2003 and was based on Gregory Maguire's 1995 novel), the Sci-Fi Channel's dystopian mini-series Tin Man (2007), the abysmal, low-budget Dorothy and the Witches of Oz (2012), and now several major films in 2013.

Dorothy of Oz
The upcoming Dorothy of Oz is a computer animated film based on books written by one of Baum's great-grandson's, Roger S. Baum, a former banker and stockbroker. L. Frank Baum did work as a travelling salesman, bred rare chickens and wrote a book on visual merchandising prior to creating Oz, so perhaps we won't  let Roger S. Baum's former career prejudice us too much against his stories. The trailers suggest the film is aimed at a pre-teen audience, but the now familiar motif of an Oz that is no longer quite so "wonderful" is central in even this version. The story outline states that not only has Kansas been devastated by the cyclone that transported Dorothy to Oz in the first place, but that Oz itself "is in a state of decay". 

Fairuza Balk at Dorothy in Return to Oz (after escaping a
mental institution)
Disney's Return to Oz (1985) pioneered the representation of a severely decayed Oz complete with the yellow brick road in rubble. Though one of the books on which it was based, Ozma of Oz, did indeed feature some of the characters and places shown in the film, including the Wheelers (though I don't think they had punk hair in Baum's day), the deadly desert and the Nome King (who imprisoned the Royal Family of the Land of Ev within ornaments). Dorothy being sent to a dubious mental institution for electroshock therapy after her first visit to Oz, however, was solely the questionable invention of Disney.

Dorothy in one of W.W.
Denslow's original
illustrations (1900)
Dorothy of Oz, Return to Oz and Tin Man all retain Dorothy, or a Dorothy-like figure, as the protagonist. The first two preserve Dorothy's girlhood, as in Baum's books, where illustrations suggest that she is under ten years of age. Judy Garland was sixteen at the time that she played Dorothy in the MGM film, and despite having her breasts bound and supposedly wearing a corset, she contributed a much older, and substantially less feisty, Dorothy to our popular imagination. Tin Man's D.G. is a small-town waitress who has been hidden in the world beyond Oz by her mother, the former Queen of Oz, from her sister, Azkadellia, who is possessed by the spirit of an evil witch. As an adult, she is not especially dependent on others, is smart and brave, and eventually discovers her own magical powers. For an article on this very topic, you can read Deb Waterhouse-Watson's "Re/deconstructing the Yellow Brick Road".)



The most heavily promoted new Oz adaptation is Disney's Oz the Great and Powerful (dir. Sam Raimi), which is described as something of a prequel to The Wizard of Oz. Disney has clearly decided to eschew the large body of Baum sequels that they might have adapted to film after the commercial failure of Return to Oz. The new film focuses on the back story of the Wizard from his time as a circus illusionist in Kansas to his travel to Oz and encounters with three witches who question whether he really is the great wizard that the people in the land of Oz have been awaiting. The trailer emphasises his journey towards becoming "a great man". This seems a little bizarre in the context of the original novel and the MGM film in which he is shown to be merely a charlatan using smoke and mirrors to deceive those who he leads. Crucially, this big-budget film necessarily omits the character of Dorothy in order to reveal the Wizard's history. Baum himself did not include Dorothy in the first sequel to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, The Marvellous Land of Oz (1904), which tells the story of Princess Ozma, who for the most part of the book is enchanted in the form of a boy named Tip. But the question that remains to be answered is whether a contemporary tale of Oz needs Dorothy as much as any story of Wonderland requires Alice. As in Wicked, the focus on the tension between good and bad women, might fill the void left by the writing of Dorothy out of Oz.