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Mirror, Mirror, Who’s the Greatest Power of them All?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-06, 06:23 authored by Emily FullerEmily Fuller
In the broader field of trauma theory, trauma is often characterised as an event that is physical, violent, and sporadic. However, feminist trauma theorists have argued that there are other forms of trauma inflicted by ideological systems such as patriarchy, resulting in less transparent versions of the traumatic. Fantasy literature, particularly children’s fantasy, has a potential to construct new visions of society that transcend these patriarchal systems for their young female heroines, and to reveal the functions of patriarchal trauma. By applying feminist trauma theory to children’s fantasy literature, this article exposes the subtler and more nuanced ways in which trauma operates, extending beyond understandings of physical and overt violence. The article offers a close reading of Jessica Townsend’s Nevermoor books (2017-2020)—a seminal Australian series that has risen to acclaim for its inclusivity, unconventional representations of gender, and creative world-building since its debut. I argue that Townsend repurposes the tropes of the fantasy genre in the Nevermoor series to hold a mirror to the harmful effects of patriarchy and the gendered violence it perpetuates. As a result, it rejects the common characterisation of trauma as overtly physical, violent, and sporadic. Rather, the series suggests that the representation of trauma in children’s literature, especially middle-grade fiction, is also gendered, and the direct consequence of patriarchy.

History

Journal

Papers: Explorations into Children's Literature

Volume

27

Pagination

21-48

Location

Geelong, Vic.

ISSN

1034-9243

eISSN

1034-9243

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

School of Communication and Creative Arts, Deakin University

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