Tiny Leaf Men and Other Tales From Outer Suburbia: Re-Presenting the Suburb in Australian Children’s Literature.

Authors

  • Kelly Oliver University of Wollongong, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2011vol21no1art1140

Keywords:

Shaun Tan, Tales From Outer Suburbia, suburbs, Australian children's literature

Abstract

This paper explores how, through word and image, Tan’s Tales From Outer Suburbia challenges stereotypical representations of the suburban. Typically, suburban spaces have been represented as aesthetically bland, mundane, and ornamental. Tan takes these tropes and ironically re-deploys them anew, and in doing so undermines anti-suburban sentiment, which has dominated Australian literary and popular culture.

Although the notion of anti-suburbanism in Australian fiction has been well documented, its presence in children’s literature has received far less attention. As a case study, Tales From Outer Suburbia, signals the ability of children’s literature to present more positive representations of suburbia because of its inherent commitment to the socialisation of children, which is prioritised over the tradition of anti-suburbanism.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

  • Kelly Oliver, University of Wollongong, Australia

    Kelly Oliver is a PhD candidate at the University of Wollongong. Her doctoral thesis is on representations of suburbia in literature for children. Other areas of interest include the grotesque and the cultural, and social history of Australia.

References

Blunt, A. (2005) ‘Cultural geography: Cultural geographies of home’, Progress in Human Geography, 29, 4, 505-515.

Boyd, R. (1963) The Australian ugliness. Ringwood, Penguin.

Esson, L. (1973) The time is not yet ripe. Sydney, Currency Methuen Drama.

Gilbert, A. (1988) ‘The roots of Australian anti-suburbanism’, in S. Goldberg & F. Smith (eds) Australian cultural history. Melbourne, Cambridge University Press.

Humphries, B. (1991) Lost poems and other creatures. Sydney, Collins. Johnston, G. (1964) My brother Jack. London, Collins.

‘Kath & Kim Series 1’ (n.d.) Da Kath & Kim Website. Available from http://www.kathandkim.com/series1.htm [Accessed 6 October 2011].

Kinnane, G. (1998) ‘Shopping at last!: history, fiction and the anti-suburban tradition’, Australian Literary Studies, 18, 4, 41-55

Nodelman, P. (1988). Words about pictures: the narrative art of children's picture books. Athens, University of Georgia Press.

Pennell, B. (1997) ‘Postcolonial resignification of domestic spatiality in Australian children's fiction’, Papers, 7, 2, 38-48.

Probyn, E. (2003) ‘The spatial imperative of subjectivity’, in The handbook of cultural geography. London, Sage Publications.

Sowden, T. (1994) ‘Streets of discontent: Artists and suburbia in the 1950s’, in S. Ferber, C. Healy and C. McAuliffe (eds) Beasts of suburbia: Reinterpreting cultures in Australian suburbs. Carlton, Melbourne University Press.

Tan, S. (2008) Tales from outer suburbia. Crows Nest, Allen & Unwin

Turnbull, S. (2008) ‘Mapping the vast suburban tundra: Australian comedy from Dame Edna to Kath and Kim’, International Journal of Cultural Studies, 11, 1, 15-32

Downloads

Published

2011-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Tiny Leaf Men and Other Tales From Outer Suburbia: Re-Presenting the Suburb in Australian Children’s Literature”. (2011) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 21(1), pp. 57–66. doi:10.21153/pecl2011vol21no1art1140.

Similar Articles

51-60 of 193

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.