Ozzie Kids Flee the Garden of Delight: Reconfigurations of Childhood in Australian Children’s Fictions

Authors

  • Beverley Pennell

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2003vol13no2art1287

Keywords:

Australian children's fiction, power relations, adults, children, cultural discourse

Abstract

Popular texts such as Joanne Horniman's 'Sand Monkeys' and Odo Hirsch's trilogy of 'Hazel Green' books are used to study the way childhood is conceptualised in contemporary Australian fiction for children, thus arguing that cultural discourses around children and childhood have shifted from an emphasis on adulthood and childhood as distinct and separate domains of experience. The shift is viewed as incorporating an increasing democratisation of power relations between adults and children, and an appreciation of the diversity of child populations.

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References

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Published

2003-07-01

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Ozzie Kids Flee the Garden of Delight: Reconfigurations of Childhood in Australian Children’s Fictions” (2003) Papers: Explorations into Children’s Literature, 13(2), pp. 5–14. doi:10.21153/pecl2003vol13no2art1287.

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