Title of article
Alcatraz and Iser: Applying Wolfgang Iser’s Concepts of Implied Reader and Implied Author and Reality to the Metafictive Alcatraz Smedry Series
Author/Authors
Michele D. Castleman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
14
From page
19
To page
32
Abstract
As a narrative series, Brandon Sanderson’s humorous, middle grade,
Alcatraz Smedry novels display some of the arguably vague concepts of Reader
Response theorist Wolfgang Iser as accessible themes that encourage a critical
understanding of the stories. Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians (2007), Alcatraz
Versus the Scrivener’s Bones (2008) and Alcatraz Versus the Knights of Crystallia
(2009) are the supposed autobiographies of 13-year-old Alcatraz Smedry, who
regularly pauses the narrative to comment on the nature of reality and fantasy and
on his state as a hero. As the implied author, Alcatraz directly addresses the reader
to describe characteristics of the implied readers and to note gaps in the narrative
and aspects of the story’s structure. The metafictive techniques incorporated
throughout Sanderson’s fantasy parodies guide readers to ask critical questions of
the books, the fantasy genre, reality and Alcatraz’s characterization of himself.
Examining the Alcatraz series with the lens of Iser’s concepts displays their use in
children’s literature and demonstrates how issues of the implied author and implied
reader may stretch beyond the scope of an individual narrative into questions and
critiques of genre, parody, metafiction, reality and the reliability of a narrator
Keywords
Iser Implied reader Implied author Alcatraz Smedry series Brandon Sanderson
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Record number
828049
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