Title of article
Girlhood, Sexual Violence, and Agency in Francesca Lia Block’s ‘‘Wolf’’
Author/Authors
Wende Elizabeth Marshall، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
18
From page
217
To page
234
Abstract
This essay examines the representation of adolescent girlhood, sexual
violence and agency in Francesca Lia Block’s contemporary fairy tale collection
The Rose and The Beast. Focusing specifically on the tale ‘‘Wolf,’’ the author
provides a literary analysis of how Block draws on and reworks traditional Western
fairy tale variants to reintroduce repressed material about father–daughter incest and
sexual violence within the family. This theoretical analysis is augmented by a
discussion of how 25 students enrolled in an undergraduate young adult literature
course for pre-service English education students read Block’s ‘‘Wolf.’’ The author
concludes that despite Block’s revisionist attempts to attend to the rapacious father
figure, evidence from student readings reveals that they interpret ‘‘Wolf’’ in ways
that fit broader cultural pedagogies of femininity that position the girl as a victim
who must learn to defend her body. The author concludes with a discussion of the
possibilities and limitations of how gender, sexual violence, and agency can be
represented, read, and taught in a contemporary context amidst conflicting cultural
scripts of girlhood vulnerability and empowerment.
Keywords
Francesca Lia Block Girlhood Feminist theory Teacher education
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Record number
828016
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