Edited by Milicent Lenz with Carol Scott
Paper - 9780814332078
Price: $27.95s
Subjects: Children's Studies
Series: Landscapes of Childhood Series
Tweet
Published by Wayne State University Press
Millicent Lenz was professor at the School of Information Science and Policy at the University at Albany, State University of New York. She was author of many works, including Alternative Worlds of Fantasy Fiction: Ursula K. LeGuin, Terry Pratchett, and Philip Pullman (Continuum, 2001) and Nuclear Age Literature for Youth: The Quest for a Life-Affirming Ethic (American Library Association, 1990), which was awarded the Prize for Best Book of Criticism of Children’s Literature by the Children’s Literature Association.
Carole Scott is professor of English in the Children’s Literature Program at San Diego State University and former undergraduate dean. She is co-author of How Picturebooks Work (Garland, 2001).
“His Dark Materials by itself is a fascinating and enjoyable reading experience; the essays in His Dark Materials Illuminated contribute valuable insights to scholars at all levels: undergraduate, graduate, and professional.”
— Childrens Literature Association Quarterly
“His Dark Materials, arguably the most significant fantasy trilogy of the late twentieth century, explores some of the most important moral and cultural issues confronting young readers in their quest for life’s meanings. Its power to evoke both speculative and scholarly responses is amply answered by these well-informed and informative studies, which combine a wide range of critical approaches with lively and challenging approaches to the fiction.”
— John Stephens, Macquarie University, editor of Ways of Being Male: Representing Masculinities in Children’s Literature and Film and author of Language and Ideology in Children’s Fiction
“His Dark Materials Illuminated offers fifteen essays by various hands that uncover the richness of Philip Pullman’s provocative trilogy. Pullman’s work emerges from this collection as an intense and sophisticated story and argument. The authors deal in a scholarly but accessible fashion with the polemical nature of this masterwork.”
— Roderick McGillis, University of Calgary, editor of Children’s Literature and the Fin de Siècle
“A distinguished cast of contributors delivers a high-quality collection of essays that consistently matches Pullman’s originality and intelligence. This is the best examination of a major work that I have seen for some years—detailed, wide-ranging, and often startling: an important contribution to the criticism of fantasy and science fiction, with excellent material on intertextuality and theology.”
— Peter Hunt, Cardiff University, editor of the International Companion Encyclopedia of Children’s Literature and co-editor of the Norton Anthology of Children’s Literature