Title of article :
‘‘Nothing Like Pretend’’: Difference, Disorder,
and Dystopia in The Multiple World Spaces
of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials
Author/Authors :
Sarah K. Cantrell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
This article examines the multiple worlds in Philip Pullman’s His Dark
Materials trilogy in light Pierre Bourdieu’s ‘‘space of possibles’’ and the combination
of chance and choice that impact Lyra and Will’s decisions. Rather than
viewing chance or destiny as disempowering, this article considers how the protagonists’
choices also encourage readers to confront their own notions of space in
the world outside the narrative. As Lyra and Will work to escape and restore the
dystopic multiverses through which they travel, Pullman’s text challenges readers to
recognize and repair the dystopias in their own worlds and to accept the Keatsian
‘‘negative capabilities’’ of ambiguity and mystery in place of facile escape. Given
this pedagogical imperative, Pullman’s enclosure of Lyra and Will in their separate
worlds lies at the heart of his resistance to escapist tendencies of fairy-tale endings.
Fantasy must be grounded in reality because Pullman’s readers must also continue
the struggle for wisdom in their own worlds no less than Lyra and Will.
Keywords :
His Dark Materials Philip Pullman Space Multiple worlds Parallel universes Adolescence Dystopias in literature
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education