Title of article
‘You are a Flaw in the Pattern’: Difference, Autonomy and Bullying in YA Fiction
Author/Authors
Lourdes Lopez-Ropero، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
13
From page
145
To page
157
Abstract
Though portrayals of bullying in children’s books stretch back to Victorian
public school stories, this article sees a new subgenre about bullying in young
adult novels emerging in the post-Columbine years. Selected works by Jerry Spinelli,
Walter Dean Myers, Jaime Adoff, Carol Plum-Ucci and Rita Williams-Garcia
are examined, although the article begins by looking at a precursor of this subgenre,
Robert Cormier’s classic The Chocolate War. In this subgenre, it is argued that
bullying is not presented as dysfunctional adolescent behavior, but as a tool for
addressing issues of difference and discrimination on the grounds of race, class,
sexual orientation or personality; issues that filter into adolescent culture. High
schools are thus portrayed as totalitarian microcosms where bullying functions as a
means of social control, curbing deviance from masculine, heterosexual, middleclass
and white norms. The narrative techniques and themes of these books—around
homophobia, jock culture, rampage shootings and girl-on–girl violence—will be
examined.
Keywords
Bullying Difference Homophobia Racism Girl-on-girl violence Young adult
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Record number
828085
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