TY - BOOK ID - 77885939 TI - Critical Children PY - 2011 SN - 0231527993 9780231527996 9780231157827 0231157827 9780231157834 PB - New York, NY DB - UniCat KW - American fiction -- History and criticism. KW - Children in literature. KW - English fiction -- History and criticism. KW - Children in literature KW - American fiction KW - English fiction KW - English KW - Languages & Literatures KW - American Literature KW - English literature KW - Childhood in literature KW - Children in poetry KW - History and criticism KW - History and criticism. KW - American literature KW - Twain, Mark KW - Salinger, Jerome David KW - Roth, Philip, 1933-2018. Portnoy's Complaint KW - Dickens, Charles KW - Criticism and interpretation UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:77885939 AB - The ten novels explored in Critical Children portray children so vividly that their names are instantly recognizable. Richard Locke traces the 130-year evolution of these iconic child characters, moving from Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, and Pip in Great Expectations to Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn; from Miles and Flora in The Turn of the Screw to Peter Pan and his modern American descendant, Holden Caulfield; and finally to Lolita and Alexander Portnoy. "It's remarkable," writes Locke, "that so many classic (or, let's say, unforgotten) English and American novels should focus on children and adolescents not as colorful minor characters but as the intense center of attention." Despite many differences of style, setting, and structure, they all enlist a particular child's story in a larger cultural narrative. In Critical Children, Locke describes the ways the children in these novels have been used to explore and evade large social, psychological, and moral problems. Writing as an editor, teacher, critic, and essayist, Locke demonstrates the way these great novels work, how they spring to life from their details, and how they both invite and resist interpretation and provoke rereading. Locke conveys the variety and continued vitality of these books as they shift from Victorian moral allegory to New York comic psychoanalytic monologue, from a child who is an agent of redemption to one who is a narcissistic prisoner of guilt and proud rage. ER -