Title of article :
Institutionalizing The Outsiders: YA Literature, Social
Class, and the American Faith in Education
Author/Authors :
Eric L. Tribunella، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The Outsiders if often credited with marking the emergence of YA literature.
It was written by a teenager and was intended to represent honestly the difficult
lives of other young adults. Despite the novel’s audience and purpose and its
potentially provocative acknowledgment of the problems of social class, The Outsiders
was readily institutionalized as part of school reading lists and educational curricula
throughout the United States. Its institutionalization can be accounted for in part by
the way it offers a palliative to the problems it depicts. The protagonist, Ponyboy,
represents the novel itself as an intervention into those problems, but it works to
reaffirm a notion of rugged individualism and a faith in American education. Such
lessons ultimately disarm the novel’s class critique and render it safe for educational
institutions
Keywords :
S.E. Hinton ? The Outsiders ? Educational use of literature ? Social class ?Alienation
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education