Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005

This thesis contends that YA fantasy fiction continuously evolves to adapt to its ageing readership, calls for more diversity, and a circuitous relationship between publishers, authors, and content creators which enables fans to participate in the formation of a YA canon distinct from traditional fa...

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Main Author: Beestone, Kelly
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/74262/
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author Beestone, Kelly
author_facet Beestone, Kelly
author_sort Beestone, Kelly
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis contends that YA fantasy fiction continuously evolves to adapt to its ageing readership, calls for more diversity, and a circuitous relationship between publishers, authors, and content creators which enables fans to participate in the formation of a YA canon distinct from traditional fantasy literature. The first chapter examines the creation of the YA community, exploring how it mimics the behaviours and practices of other fandoms, including gatekeeping membership through cultural capital. This chapter serves as a foundation for the chapters that follow, which each consider close-reading analysis of case study texts alongside paratextual and fan-created sources. Chapter 2 looks at the role of the female protagonist in three YA series: Leigh Bardugo’s Shadow and Bone (2012), Marie Lu’s The Young Elites (2014), and Susan Dennard’s Truthwitch (2016), acknowledging how the novels challenge pseudo-medieval models of fantasy literature through myth-making centering female protagonists. Chapter 3 explores the romanticisation of toxic masculinity in Sarah J. Maas’ popular A Court of Thorns and Roses (2015) trilogy, contending that it normalises hegemonic masculinity by comparing the protagonist’s two love interests and by drawing on fairy tales and Greek mythology. In Chapter 4, I consider how Tomi Adeyemi discusses race and the Black Lives Matter movement in America through her Nigeria-inspired novel Children of Blood and Bone (2018), arguing that she uses allegory in her narrative alongside paratextual and epitextual sources such as interviews and author’s notes in an attempt to educate readers on police brutality in the U.S. Finally, in Chapter 5, I consider how in the Shades of Magic trilogy (2015) V.E. Schwab attempts to create a fantasy setting where queer characters are able to live without fear of discrimination, and how her experiences as an LGBTQ+ author complicate this goal, creating a tension between authorial intention and reader responses.
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spelling nottingham-742622025-02-28T15:18:41Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/74262/ Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005 Beestone, Kelly This thesis contends that YA fantasy fiction continuously evolves to adapt to its ageing readership, calls for more diversity, and a circuitous relationship between publishers, authors, and content creators which enables fans to participate in the formation of a YA canon distinct from traditional fantasy literature. The first chapter examines the creation of the YA community, exploring how it mimics the behaviours and practices of other fandoms, including gatekeeping membership through cultural capital. This chapter serves as a foundation for the chapters that follow, which each consider close-reading analysis of case study texts alongside paratextual and fan-created sources. Chapter 2 looks at the role of the female protagonist in three YA series: Leigh Bardugo’s Shadow and Bone (2012), Marie Lu’s The Young Elites (2014), and Susan Dennard’s Truthwitch (2016), acknowledging how the novels challenge pseudo-medieval models of fantasy literature through myth-making centering female protagonists. Chapter 3 explores the romanticisation of toxic masculinity in Sarah J. Maas’ popular A Court of Thorns and Roses (2015) trilogy, contending that it normalises hegemonic masculinity by comparing the protagonist’s two love interests and by drawing on fairy tales and Greek mythology. In Chapter 4, I consider how Tomi Adeyemi discusses race and the Black Lives Matter movement in America through her Nigeria-inspired novel Children of Blood and Bone (2018), arguing that she uses allegory in her narrative alongside paratextual and epitextual sources such as interviews and author’s notes in an attempt to educate readers on police brutality in the U.S. Finally, in Chapter 5, I consider how in the Shades of Magic trilogy (2015) V.E. Schwab attempts to create a fantasy setting where queer characters are able to live without fear of discrimination, and how her experiences as an LGBTQ+ author complicate this goal, creating a tension between authorial intention and reader responses. 2023-12-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/74262/1/Kelly%20Beestone%20PhD%20American%20and%20Canadian%20Studies%202023.pdf Beestone, Kelly (2023) Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. YA fantasy fiction young adult literature fantasy literature
spellingShingle YA fantasy fiction
young adult literature
fantasy literature
Beestone, Kelly
Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title_full Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title_fullStr Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title_full_unstemmed Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title_short Exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the U.S. since 2005
title_sort exploring trends and tropes in young adult fantasy literature from the u.s. since 2005
topic YA fantasy fiction
young adult literature
fantasy literature
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/74262/