Narratives of Love and Loss

Regular price €137.99
A01=Margaret Rustin
A01=Michael Rustin
Anal Connotations
Attentiveness Focus
Author_Margaret Rustin
Author_Michael Rustin
Baker's Boy
Baker’s Boy
Carrie's War
Carrie’s War
Category=JMAF
Charlotte's Death
Charlotte's Web
Charlotte’s Death
child
child psychology literature
Child Reader
Children's Imaginative Play
childrens
Children’s Imaginative Play
Classic Fairy Tales
Cross Man
development
Egg Sac
emotional
emotional development theory
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fairy Tales
fantasy fiction studies
fiction
garden
Lake Nature Reserve
Long Horns
Michael Rustin
midnight
modern
Modern Children's Fiction
Modern Children’s Fiction
Mr Sparrow
Mrs Arable
Mrs Driver
Open Road
Paula Fox
Personal Development
Plastic Indian
postwar British American narratives
psychoanalytic approach to children's fiction
psychoanalytic literary analysis
readers
sociocultural context children
Tom's Midnight Garden
toms
Tom’s Midnight Garden
Toy Shop
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367105181
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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On its first publication Narratives of Love and Loss was widely recognised as an important and perceptive contribution to the study of children's literature and for its capacity to stimulate deep emotional responses in both child and adult readers. This welcome reissue includes a new postscript exploring in detail the phenomenal success of J.K Rowling's series of Harry Potter stories. The authors succeed in bringing a deep sociological and psychoanalytic close reading to some of the finest writing for children in post-war Britain and America, including works by C.S. Lewis, Rumer Godden, E.B. White and Russel Hoban. Focussed primarily on the 'fantasy genre of stories' the authors identify and sensitively explore the themes of imaginative and emotional growth, language and play, love and loss; always situating these within the broader social and cultural context.
Margaret Rustin