Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/165568
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- Title
- Skin Colour, surveillance and subjectivity : deconstructing race in Jan Mark's Useful Idiots
- Related
- International research in children's literature, Vol. 4, Issue 2, (2011), p.166-179
- DOI
- 10.3366/ircl.2011.0024
- Publisher
- Edinburgh University Press
- Date
- 2011
- Author/Creator
- Flanagan, Victoria
- Description
- Although discussions of race in children's literature tend to focus on realist narrative fictions, fantasy has rich potential for critically examining the concept of racial difference. Useful Idiots (2004), a young adult novel by British author Jan Mark, acts as the focus of my analysis because it is a fantasy novel that offers readers a highly innovative and unconventional exploration of the social discourses that construct and perpetuate racial hierarchies. Using David Lyon's theories about modern surveillance, whiteness studies and Bakhtin's concept of grotesque realism as a theoretical framework, this article argues that Mark inventively interrogates numerous assumptions that underpin race in modern society by depicting a character who, throughout the course of the narrative, gradually becomes a racialised subject. The portrayal of this process constitutes a highly effective and original representation of what it means to be considered 'the other'.
- Description
- 14 page(s)
- Subject Keyword
- Race
- Subject Keyword
- whiteness studies
- Subject Keyword
- grotesque realism
- Subject Keyword
- surveillance
- Subject Keyword
- Useful Idiots
- Subject Keyword
- Jan Mark
- Subject Keyword
- Bakhtin
- Subject Keyword
- racialised body
- Subject Keyword
- fantasy
- Subject Keyword
- defamiliarisation
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Organisation
- Macquarie University. Dept. of English
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/165568
- Identifier
- ISSN:1755-6198
- Identifier
- mq_res-ext-wos299236400004
- Language
- eng
- Full Text

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