Diana Wynne Jones: The Fantastic Tradition and Children's Literature

Author:   Farah Mendlesohn
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Volume:   36
ISBN:  

9780415970235


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   26 August 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Diana Wynne Jones: The Fantastic Tradition and Children's Literature


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Full Product Details

Author:   Farah Mendlesohn
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Volume:   36
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.670kg
ISBN:  

9780415970235


ISBN 10:   0415970237
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   26 August 2005
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Series Editor's Foreward Acknowledgments Introduction: The Critical Fictions of Diana Wynne Jones Chapter One. Wilkins' Tooth Chapter Two: Agency and Jones's Understanding of Adolescence Chapter Three: Time Games. Chapter Four: Diana Wynne Jones and the Portal-quest Fantasy Chapter Five: The Immersive Fantasy Chapter Six: Making the Mundane Fantastic: Liminality, Estrangement, Irony and Equipoise Chapter Seven: A Mad Kind of Reasonableness Epilogue Notes Bibliographies

Reviews

A very perceptive study. -- London Evening Standard Mendlesohn's thought-provoking and critically informed work...is a valuable source not only for those interested in fantasy or in Jones's output, but also for educators concerned with fostering children's intllectual capacities. Justyna Deszcz-Tryhubczak, Marvels & Tales This much needed book will be an invaluable companion to those who are already enthusiastic about the work of Diana Wynne Jones, as well as being a more than useful guide to those as yet relatively unfamiliar with her novels. Mendelsohn's emphasis is on Jones as a writer of critical fantasy, and the distinctions she draws between different varieties of fantasy (such as portal-quest and immersive) are particularly helpful in the light they throw on her claim that Jones's novels are in effect teaching young readers how to read the fantastic intelligently and critically. -- Pat Pinsent, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research in Children's Literature, University of Roehampton Farah Mendlesohn has provided an excellent and long overdue study on the fantasy literature of Diana Wynne Jones; her carefully considered insights will shape critical discussions of Jones and her fiction for years to come. -- C.W. Sullivan III, Welsh Celtic Myth and Modern Fantasy extremely convincing....Mendlesohn has done a great service --Maureen Kincaid Speller, University of Kent at Canterbury


A very perceptive study. -London Evening Standard, March 2005 Farah Mendlesohn, Diana Wynne Jones: Children's Literature and the Fantastic Tradition.This much needed book will be an invaluable companion to those who are already enthusiastic about the work of Diana Wynne Jones, as well as being a more than useful guide to those as yet relatively unfamiliar with her novels. Mendelsohn's emphasis is on Jones as a writer of critical fantasy, and the distinctions she draws between different varieties of fantasy (such as portal-quest and immersive) are particularly helpful in the light they throw on her claim that Jones's novels are in effect teaching young readers how to read the fantastic intelligently and critically. -Pat Pinsent, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research in Children's Literature, University of Roehampton Farah Mendlesohn has provided an excellent and long overdue study on the fantasy literature of Diana Wynne Jones; her carefully considered insights will shape critical discussions of Jones and her fiction for years to come. -C.W. Sullivan III, Welsh Celtic Myth and Modern Fantasy


""A very perceptive study."" -- London Evening Standard ""Mendlesohn's thought-provoking and critically informed work...is a valuable source not only for those interested in fantasy or in Jones's output, but also for educators concerned with fostering children's intllectual capacities."" Justyna Deszcz-Tryhubczak, Marvels & Tales ""This much needed book will be an invaluable companion to those who are already enthusiastic about the work of Diana Wynne Jones, as well as being a more than useful guide to those as yet relatively unfamiliar with her novels. Mendelsohn's emphasis is on Jones as a writer of critical fantasy, and the distinctions she draws between different varieties of fantasy (such as portal-quest and immersive) are particularly helpful in the light they throw on her claim that Jones's novels are in effect teaching young readers how to read the fantastic intelligently and critically."" -- Pat Pinsent, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research in Children's Literature, University of Roehampton ""Farah Mendlesohn has provided an excellent and long overdue study on the fantasy literature of Diana Wynne Jones; her carefully considered insights will shape critical discussions of Jones and her fiction for years to come."" -- C.W. Sullivan III, Welsh Celtic Myth and Modern Fantasy ""extremely convincing....Mendlesohn has done a great service""--Maureen Kincaid Speller, University of Kent at Canterbury


A very perceptive study. <br>-London Evening Standard, March 2005 <br> Farah Mendlesohn, Diana Wynne Jones: Children's Literature and the Fantastic Tradition.<br>This much needed book will be an invaluable companion to those who are already enthusiastic about the work of Diana Wynne Jones, as well as being a more than useful guide to those as yet relatively unfamiliar with her novels. Mendelsohn's emphasis is on Jones as a writer of critical fantasy, and the distinctions she draws between different varieties of fantasy (such as portal-quest and immersive) are particularly helpful in the light they throw on her claim that Jones's novels are in effect teaching young readers how to read the fantastic intelligently and critically. <br>-Pat Pinsent, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research in Children's Literature, University of Roehampton <br> Farah Mendlesohn has provided an excellent and long overdue study on the fantasy literature of Diana Wynne Jones; her carefully considered insights will shape critical discussions of Jones and her fiction for years to come. <br>-C.W. Sullivan III, Welsh Celtic Myth and Modern Fantasy <br>


A very perceptive study. -- London Evening Standard Mendlesohn's thought-provoking and critically informed work...is a valuable source not only for those interested in fantasy or in Jones's output, but also for educators concerned with fostering children's intllectual capacities. Justyna Deszcz-Tryhubczak, Marvels & Tales This much needed book will be an invaluable companion to those who are already enthusiastic about the work of Diana Wynne Jones, as well as being a more than useful guide to those as yet relatively unfamiliar with her novels. Mendelsohn's emphasis is on Jones as a writer of critical fantasy, and the distinctions she draws between different varieties of fantasy (such as portal-quest and immersive) are particularly helpful in the light they throw on her claim that Jones's novels are in effect teaching young readers how to read the fantastic intelligently and critically. -- Pat Pinsent, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research in Children's Literature, University of Roehampton Farah Mendlesohn has provided an excellent and long overdue study on the fantasy literature of Diana Wynne Jones; her carefully considered insights will shape critical discussions of Jones and her fiction for years to come. -- C.W. Sullivan III, Welsh Celtic Myth and Modern Fantasy extremely convincing....Mendlesohn has done a great service --Maureen Kincaid Speller, University of Kent at Canterbury


Author Information

Farah Mendlesohn is a noted science fiction critic and historian. She is Editor of the journal Foundation: theInternational Review of Science Fiction and has twice served as a judge for the esteemed Arthur C. Clarke award for best work in sf. She co-edited, with Professor Edward James, The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction.

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