Title of article :
Ancestral Voices—‘Since Time everlasting Beyond’:
two books, Poetry for
Life (Cassell, 1989) and Kipling and the Invention
Tracing the Tradition:
An Anthology of Poetry of the Time-Slip Story
Author/Authors :
Linda Hall، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
In this study of Kipling’s Puck books, I attempt to clarify the endurgenre
in Historical Fic- ing characteristics of the time-slip story as he and E. Nesbit invented
tion for Children (Da- it and also to determine his own distinctive contribution to the
vid Fulton, 2001, edited genre. Although his formal procedures were not influential, his geby
Collins and Gra- ham). She is now a free- nius lies in showing us ‘the mere uncounted folk’ of history, not the
lance lecturer and big players of E. Nesbit’s stories. As a conservative democrat, he
writer. shows what treasures are hid on one’s own hearth and doorstep, so
to speak, so that you do not have to venture far to find magic. For
Kipling, that magic resides in the common culture of England, the
surviving traditional ways, which catastrophic changes over two
thousand years had not greatly altered. The magic is traced to the
nature of the land itself, a place deeply enchanted and manifest in
the ‘merry supernaturalism’ that G. K. Chesterton saw in Shakespeare’s
A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Keywords :
tradition , Rootedness , Work. , History , MAGIC , the common culture , time-slip genre
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education