Reimagining Blighty

Q2 Arts and Humanities Barnboken Pub Date : 2022-10-06 DOI:10.14811/clr.v45.711
Siobhán Callaghan
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Abstract

This article examines the relationship between aesthetics and pedagogy in two recent historical novels for children about the British Home Front during the Second World War: Letters from the Lighthouse (2017) by Emma Carroll and Our Castle by the Sea (2019) by Lucy Strange. It argues that the representation of civilian life during the war in both novels is conditioned by recent socio-political events in Britain, namely, the recurrent appropriation of the wartime past in support of nationalist and anti-immigration rhetoric. The texts discussed in this article seek to counter this narrative, foregrounding immigration as a vital part of Britain’s wartime past. Drawing upon historical fiction studies and cultural analysis, the article begins with an exploration of the aesthetic treatment of wartime Britain in the texts more broadly, arguing that Letters from the Lighthouse participates in and subverts idealised visions of the Home Front, while Our Castle by the Sea rejects nostalgia entirely. I conclude my discussion with an examination of the use of the wartime spy story as an aesthetic template for exploring concepts of xenophobia and prejudice in the two novels. Ultimately, this article contends that literary aesthetics perform a pedagogic function in both texts, presenting the contribution of immigrants and refugees as crucial to the story of the Britain Home Front.
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本文考察了最近两部关于二战期间英国大后方的儿童历史小说中美学与教育学的关系:艾玛·卡罗尔的《灯塔来信》(2017)和露西·斯特兰奇的《海边城堡》(2019)。它认为,这两部小说对战争期间平民生活的表现都受到了英国最近的社会政治事件的制约,也就是说,为了支持民族主义和反移民的言论,战争时期的历史被反复挪用。本文讨论的文本试图反驳这种说法,将移民作为英国战时历史的重要组成部分。在历史小说研究和文化分析的基础上,本文首先从更广泛的文本中探索战时英国的美学处理,认为《灯塔来信》参与并颠覆了对大后方的理想化愿景,而《海边城堡》则完全拒绝怀旧。最后,我考察了在这两部小说中,战时间谍故事作为探索仇外心理和偏见概念的美学模板的使用。最后,本文认为,文学美学在这两个文本中都发挥了教育功能,将移民和难民的贡献呈现为英国大后方故事的关键。
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来源期刊
Barnboken
Barnboken Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
20 weeks
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