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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jessica R. McCortPublisher: University Press of Mississippi Imprint: University Press of Mississippi Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.555kg ISBN: 9781496806444ISBN 10: 1496806441 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 30 April 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews<i>Reading in the Dark</i> is an ambitious reconfiguring of horror and children's literature, reaching back to our earliest texts and pretexts. True to the title, the chapters in this collection are about both the impossible (reading in the dark) and about the giddily terrified welcome we have given to our monsters since our earliest days, as we read the dark <i>into</i> our fairy tales, our picture books, our films, our poetry, and our prose. --Joe Sutliff Sanders, associate professor of children's literature in the English Department at Kansas State University</p> Horror in children's literature has an interesting past and the potential for a promising future, particularly in promoting literacy and engaging young readers. This book explores a bit of that timeline while evaluating horror's influence on childhood, offering an excellent addition to horror studies.--Tiffany Morin Children's Literature Association Quarterly Though each individual essay presents a depth of knowledge on its chosen subject, the collection suggests that, though horror certainly exists within children's literature and culture, scholars should expand how they think about genre in order to open up potential lines of inquiry--Sara Austin The Lion and the Unicorn Reading in the Dark . . . may well refer to the impossible art of attempting to read a scary book in the darkness under the covers, or the act of reading the darkness within stories, as these collected critics attempt to do here, with enlightening and insightful results. As a series of explorations of what McCort calls 'the dark aesthetic, ' the collection not only succeeds but manages to break new critical ground.--Rebecca Long Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies Reading in the Dark is an ambitious reconfiguring of horror and children's literature, reaching back to our earliest texts and pretexts. True to the title, the chapters in this collection are about both the impossible (reading in the dark) and about the giddily terrified welcome we have given to our monsters since our earliest days, as we read the dark into our fairy tales, our picture books, our films, our poetry, and our prose.--Joe Sutliff Sanders, associate professor of children's literature in the English Department at Kansas State University Reading in the Dark is an ambitious reconfiguring of horror and children s literature, reaching back to our earliest texts and pretexts. True to the title, the chapters in this collection are about both the impossible (reading in the dark) and about the giddily terrified welcome we have given to our monsters since our earliest days, as we read the dark into our fairy tales, our picture books, our films, our poetry, and our prose. Joe Sutliff Sanders, associate professor of children s literature in the English Department at Kansas State University Author InformationJessica R. McCort, Washington, Pennsylvania, USA is an assistant professor at Point Park University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her most recent book project is a compilation of essays concerning the intersection of the horror genre and children's cultures. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |