Plucky Lads and Succubi: Fin de Siecle Masculinity in Kim, Peter Pan and The Turn of the Screw

Authors

  • Lucy Hamilton

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl1998vol8no2art1375

Keywords:

Peter Pan, masculinity, KIm, The Turn of the Screw, Rudyard Kipling, homoeroticism, Bildungsroman, hegemonic masculinity, gender role, misogyny, J.M Barrie, Henry James

Abstract

See article

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Auerbach, Nina (1989) 'Alice and Wonderland: a curious child', in Victorian Fiction, ed. Harold Bloom. New York, Chelsea House, 403-415.

Avery, Gillian (1975) Childhood's Pattern: A Study of the Heroes and Heroines of Children’s Fiction 1770-1950. London, Hodder and Stoughton.

Barrie, James (1994) Peter Pan. Harmondsworth, Penguin (1911).

Blake, Kathleen (1977) 'The Sea-Dream: Peter Pan and Treasure Island', Children's Literature, 6, 165-181.

Boehmer, El1eke (1995) Colonial and Postcolonial Literature. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Carpenter, Humphrey and Prichard, Mari (1984) Oxford Companion to Children's Literature. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Coveney, Peter (1967) The Image of Childhood. Harmondsworth, Penguin.

Cranny-Francis, Anne (1992) Engendering Fiction: Analysing Gender in the Production and Reception of Texts. Kensington, New South Wales University Press.

Dixon, Robert (1995) Writing the Colonial Adventure: Race, Gender and Nation in Anglo-Australian Popular Fiction, 1875-1914. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Egan, Michael (1982) 'The Neverland of id: Barrie, Peter Pan and Freud', Children's Literature 10, 37-55.

Fiedler, Leslie (1962) 'The eye of innocence' in Henry Anatole Grunwald, ed., Salinger: a Critical and Personal Portrait. New York, Harper and Row, 218- 245.

Howarth, Patrick (1973) Play Up and Play the Game: the Heroes of Popular Boy's Fiction. London, Eyre Methuen.

James, Henry (1986) The Aspern Papers and the Turn of the Screw. Harmondsworth, Penguin (1898).

Kincaid, James (1992) Child Loving: the Erotic Child and Victorian Culture. New York, Routledge.

Kipling, Rudyard (1996) Kim. Harmondsworth, Penguin (1901).

Lustig, T. J. (1994) Henry James and the Ghostly. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

McBratney, John (1992) 'Imperial subjects, imperial space in Kipling's Jungle Book', Victorian Studies 35, 3, 277-293.

MacKenzie, John (1989) 'Hunting and the natural world in juvenile literature', in Jeffrey Richards, Imperialism and juvenile literature. Manchester, Manchester University Press, 144-172.

Millett, Kate (1977) Sexual Politics. London, Virago.

Nodelman, Perry (1992) 'The Other: orientalism, colonialism, and children's literature', Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 17, 1, 29-35.

Orgel, Stephen (1996) Impersonations. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Phillips, Jerry (1993) 'The Mem Sahib, The Worthy, the Rajah and his minions: Some reflections on the class politics of The Secret Garden', The Lion And The Unicorn, 17, 2, 168-194.

Plotz, Judith (1992) 'The empire of youth: crossing and double-crossing cultural barriers in Kipling's Kim', in Francelia Butler, Barbara Rosen, Judith Plotz. eds., Children's Literature 20, 111-131.

Richards, Jeffrey (ed.) (1989) Imperialism andjuvenile literature. Manchester, Manchester University Press.

Richardson, Alan (1993), 'Reluctant Lords and Lame Princes: engendering the male child in nineteenth-century juvenile fiction', Children's Literature, 21, 3-19.

Rose, Jacqueline (1992) The Case of Peter Pan, or the Impossibility of Children's Fiction. London, Macmillan.

Showalter, Elaine (1991) Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle. London, Bloomsbury.

Downloads

Published

1998-07-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Plucky Lads and Succubi: Fin de Siecle Masculinity in Kim, Peter Pan and The Turn of the Screw” (1998) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 8(2), pp. 31–39. doi:10.21153/pecl1998vol8no2art1375.

Similar Articles

11-20 of 89

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