Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction

This thesis offers an extensive stylistic analysis of postmodern and metafictive devices in contemporary middle grade fiction (for readers aged approximately 8-12 years). Although terms like postmodernism and metafiction are often deemed culturally ‘highbrow’ or ‘avant-garde’, such strategies are ri...

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Main Author: Wydrzynska, Ela
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76460/
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author Wydrzynska, Ela
author_facet Wydrzynska, Ela
author_sort Wydrzynska, Ela
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis offers an extensive stylistic analysis of postmodern and metafictive devices in contemporary middle grade fiction (for readers aged approximately 8-12 years). Although terms like postmodernism and metafiction are often deemed culturally ‘highbrow’ or ‘avant-garde’, such strategies are rife in children’s literature to the point at which they can now be considered mainstream. This is evidenced through the examination of three best-selling children’s authors: recent UK Children’s Laureate Cressida Cowell, ‘celebrity author’ Tom Fletcher, and experimental writer Pseudonymous Bosch. In addition to their commercial success with the target readership, all three of these authors deploy a plethora of sophisticated postmodern and metafictive strategies in their books, creating complex narrative structures that rival the most acclaimed canonical literature and push the limits of existing narratological terminology. Taking the over-obtrusive, visibly inventing postmodern narrator as its analytical base, this thesis examines how metafiction lays bare the construction of narrative and therein furthers the identification of an explicit composition-world through which the text’s contextual creation is playfully mediated. It is from this composition-world that the overt storyteller (or internal author) of the text engages in direct, spontaneous conversation with the real reader, metaleptically blurring reality and fiction, and dramatising child-readers as active participants in the reading process and meaning-making to increase readerly engagement, comprehension and enjoyment. Through this analysis, I argue that children’s literature ought to be considered not just within the traditional frame of pedagogy, but also for its academic and artistic value as literature in its own right. Crucially, this thesis refutes adult preconceptions that children’s books are necessarily ‘easy’ or ‘simple’. By focusing on two theoretical concepts that many adult readers themselves find difficult to navigate, I demonstrate that children’s literature is capable of far more than most people give it credit for – as are child-readers themselves.
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spelling nottingham-764602023-12-21T10:01:12Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76460/ Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction Wydrzynska, Ela This thesis offers an extensive stylistic analysis of postmodern and metafictive devices in contemporary middle grade fiction (for readers aged approximately 8-12 years). Although terms like postmodernism and metafiction are often deemed culturally ‘highbrow’ or ‘avant-garde’, such strategies are rife in children’s literature to the point at which they can now be considered mainstream. This is evidenced through the examination of three best-selling children’s authors: recent UK Children’s Laureate Cressida Cowell, ‘celebrity author’ Tom Fletcher, and experimental writer Pseudonymous Bosch. In addition to their commercial success with the target readership, all three of these authors deploy a plethora of sophisticated postmodern and metafictive strategies in their books, creating complex narrative structures that rival the most acclaimed canonical literature and push the limits of existing narratological terminology. Taking the over-obtrusive, visibly inventing postmodern narrator as its analytical base, this thesis examines how metafiction lays bare the construction of narrative and therein furthers the identification of an explicit composition-world through which the text’s contextual creation is playfully mediated. It is from this composition-world that the overt storyteller (or internal author) of the text engages in direct, spontaneous conversation with the real reader, metaleptically blurring reality and fiction, and dramatising child-readers as active participants in the reading process and meaning-making to increase readerly engagement, comprehension and enjoyment. Through this analysis, I argue that children’s literature ought to be considered not just within the traditional frame of pedagogy, but also for its academic and artistic value as literature in its own right. Crucially, this thesis refutes adult preconceptions that children’s books are necessarily ‘easy’ or ‘simple’. By focusing on two theoretical concepts that many adult readers themselves find difficult to navigate, I demonstrate that children’s literature is capable of far more than most people give it credit for – as are child-readers themselves. 2023-12-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76460/1/WYDRZYNSKA%20Ela%2014341875%20%28corrections%29.pdf Wydrzynska, Ela (2023) Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. postmodernism metafiction children's literature middle grade fiction stylistics narratology narrators internal author composition-world fictive reader real reader child-readers metalepsis
spellingShingle postmodernism
metafiction
children's literature
middle grade fiction
stylistics
narratology
narrators
internal author
composition-world
fictive reader
real reader
child-readers
metalepsis
Wydrzynska, Ela
Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title_full Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title_fullStr Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title_full_unstemmed Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title_short Do Not Read Beyond This Page: Postmodernism For Children - A stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
title_sort do not read beyond this page: postmodernism for children - a stylistic examination of postmodern and metafictive strategies in children’s middle grade fiction
topic postmodernism
metafiction
children's literature
middle grade fiction
stylistics
narratology
narrators
internal author
composition-world
fictive reader
real reader
child-readers
metalepsis
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76460/