Gymnich / Lichterfeld / Baumann A Hundred Years of The Secret Garden
1. Auflage 2012
ISBN: 978-3-8470-0054-9
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Frances Hodgson Burnett's Children's Classic Revisited
E-Book, Englisch, Band Band 009, 189 Seiten
Reihe: Representations & Reflections
ISBN: 978-3-8470-0054-9
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Title Page;4
2;Copyright;5
3;Table of Contents;6
4;Body;8
5;Marion Gymnich and Imke Lichterfeld: The Secret Garden Revisited;8
5.1;References;14
6;Raimund Borgmeier: The Garden in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden in the Context of Cultural History;16
6.1;References;27
7;Imke Lichterfeld: `There was every joy on earth in the secret garden' – Nature and Female Identity in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden;28
7.1;References;37
8;Anja Drautzburg: `It was the garden that did it!' – Spatial Representations with References to Illness and Health in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden;40
8.1;Some Reflections on Space;40
8.2;Spaces of Illness and Health;42
8.2.1;India;42
8.2.2;Misselthwaite Manor;43
8.2.3;The Secret Garden;47
8.3;Conclusion;52
8.4;References;52
9;Angelika Zirker: Redemptive Children in Frances Hodgson Burnett's Novels: Little Lord Fauntleroy and The Secret Garden;54
9.1;I. Beginnings and Introductions;56
9.2;II. Changes;60
9.3;III. Endings;65
9.4;References;67
10;Stefanie Krüger: Life in the Domestic Realm – Male Identity in The Secret Garden;70
10.1;I. Introduction;70
10.2;II. Two Domestic Realms – Misselthwaite Manor;71
10.3;III. Two Domestic Realms – The Garden;74
10.4;IV. Conclusion;76
10.5;References;77
11;Sara Strauß: Constructions of `Otherness' in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden;78
11.1;I. Representations of India as the `Other';80
11.2;II. Representations of Yorkshire as the `Other';85
11.3;References;90
12;Thomas Kullmann: The Secret Garden and the Redefinition of Englishness;92
12.1;References;104
13;Hanne Birk: Pink Cats and Dancing Daisies: A Narratological Approach to Anime and Film Versions of The Secret Garden;106
13.1;I. Introduction;106
13.2;II. Towards a Narratological Toolkit for the Analysis of Anime;109
13.3;III. Conclusion;122
13.4;References;124
14;Ramona Rossa: Forty Years On: Reimagining and Going Beyond The Secret Garden in Noel Streatfeild's The Painted Garden;126
14.1;I. Introduction;126
14.2;II. Nature and the Artificial: Rural Yorkshire and Urban California;127
14.3;III. Parent Figures and Gender Roles;131
14.4;IV. Streatfeild's Own: Children in the Performing Arts;134
14.5;V. Emancipation: Jane's Story;137
14.6;VI. Conclusion;140
14.7;References;141
15;Marion Gymnich: Porridge or Bertie Bott's Every-Flavour Beans? – Attitudes towards Food in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden and Other Children's Classics;142
15.1;I. Introduction;142
15.2;II. Getting Fat, Becoming Healthy and Happy – Food in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden;144
15.3;III. Learning to Eat with Restraint: Children's Classics from the Nineteenth Century and the Early Twentieth Century;149
15.4;IV. Eating is fun! – Food in Children's Literature from the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries;156
15.5;V. Conclusion;163
15.6;References;164
16;Gislind Rohwer-Happe: Edwardian Girlhood Fiction and the Tradition of the Female Novel of Development;168
16.1;I. The Female Bildungsroman as the Antecedent of Edwardian Girlhood Fiction;168
16.2;II. Miles Franklin's My Brilliant Career: A Fictional Autobiography Based upon Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre;171
16.3;III. Anne of Green Gables: The Heir of Jane Austen and Jane Eyre;176
16.4;IV. The Secret Garden: The Female Bildungsroman as Children's Novel;183
16.5;V. Conclusion;186
16.6;References;187
17;Contributors;190