E-Book, Englisch, 280 Seiten, eBook
Roots and Winged Seeds
E-Book, Englisch, 280 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Critical Approaches to Children's Literature
ISBN: 978-3-031-39888-9
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: Storying Plants Melanie Duckworth and Annika Herb.- Part 1: Plant temporalities and belonging in picture books.- Chapter 1: Aboriginal Australian Picturebooks: Ceremonial Listening to Plants Brooke Collins-Gearing.- Chapter 2: Trees as Agents in/of Culture: A Diffractive Reading of Plant Representation in Welcome to Country and The Rabbits Lykke H. Alara Guanio-Uluru.- Chapter 3: Longing and Belonging in the Green Worlds of Jeannie Baker Penni Russon.- Part 2: Storying trees.- Chapter 4: Forever and ever: the fig tree and its journey through time in Nadia Wheatley’s My Place Sarah Mokrzycki.- Chapter 5: The voice of the she-oak: Vegetal poetics and hope in Kirli Saunders’ verse novel Bindi Melanie Duckworth.- Part 3: Gumnuts and pohutakawa babies.- Chapter 6: Gumnuts, Plant-Human Hybridity, and the Issue of Belonging Terri Doughty.- Chapter 7: Conservation and the Flower Fairy Tradition in Avis Acres and Maurice Gee Kay Hancock and Kathryn Walls.- Part 4: Winged seeds:Exile, adventure, and migration Chapter 8: Seeking Home, Discovering the Bush: The Australian Bush Envisaged in Ukrainian Children’s Books Maryna Vardanian and Lydia Kokkola.- Chapter 9: In quest of strangeness and freedom. The Polish perspective on Australian and New Zealand nature in texts for YA readers Maciej Wróblewski.- Part 5: Vegetal visions in young adult literature.- Chapter 10: “Something here is completely, horribly, unnaturally wrong”: Uncanny Vegetation in Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff’s Aurora Rising (2019) Alena Cicholewski.- Chapter 11: Vegetal memory, power, and resistance Ambelin Kwaymullina’s The Tribe trilogy Nicole Kennedy and Melanie Duckworth.- Chapter 12: “Then something started growing in the emptiness”: Revisiting the lost child and the bush in Australian colonial and postcolonial fiction Annika Herb.