Группа авторов

A Companion to Children's Literature


Скачать книгу

overprivileged and emotionally starved, must cure themselves with the aid of Nature and working-class Dickon. The animal story, a genre adjacent to the domestic novel, often picks up on this trope of adult (or human) irresponsibility toward the vulnerable, showing figures such as the title character of Ouida’s A Dog of Flanders (1872) and Anna Sewell’s equine narrator Black Beauty (1877) as powerless to shape their own fates.

      Perhaps the most famous Evangelical domestic novel is an American example, Martha Finley’s Elsie Dinsmore (1867), the first installment of a 28-volume saga ending with Elsie and Her Namesakes in 1905. Elsie Dinsmore chronicles its virtuous heroine’s difficulties in balancing her duty to her overbearing father against her duty to God, a conflict only resolvable by the father’s belated recognition of his religious responsibilities. Somewhat similarly, a bestselling British waif tale published the same year under the auspices of the Religious Tract Society by “Hesba Stretton” (Sarah Smith), Jessica’s First Prayer, shows its title character discovering God without the aid of her drunken mother or the class-conscious church official who befriends her. It is she who awakens him religiously rather than the other way around, after which both are rewarded by being allowed to form a new family together. What LuElla D’Amico writes of Clarence and Corinne applies to Jessica’s First Prayer (and many other nineteenth-century Christian fictions) as well: the tale “encourages children to perceive themselves as powerful, and it suggests that adults in power can – and should – be subverted when religious or personal freedom is threatened” (2017, p. 182). Significantly, the nineteenth-century emphasis on child agency in fiction extends beyond the fictional world. Marah Gubar (2009) has argued that Golden Age children’s literature offers the child reader a blueprint for negotiating authority with adults, while Victoria Ford Smith (2017) traces the achievements of Victorian children as literary collaborators, critics, and active listeners.

      Yonge’s American fans included Alcott, who shows us Jo March “eating apples and crying over the ‘Heir of Redclyffe’” as chapter three of Little Women commences (p. 63). This moment is one of a number in Alcott’s works to illustrate appropriate responses to fiction, which Alcott, Yonge, and many other domestic novelists saw as a moral and emotional teaching tool. But if Alcott – who, like Jo, began her career writing sensational fiction for the penny press – learned some of her craft from Yonge, other writers learned from Alcott herself. Among the most notable of Alcott’s disciples was Ethel Turner, whose Seven Little Australians (1894) features a central character who starts the novel as a Jo figure and ends it as Beth. Turner’s admiration for Alcott suggests the importance of the transpacific as well as the transatlantic children’s market in the late nineteenth century, a period in which Australian children’s magazines reprinted material indiscriminately (and often uncredited) from both British and US sources.

      Genres: School Stories and Other Developmental Tales

      The position of the family as the child’s probable first environment meant that novels in other genres might well begin as domestic fiction; the opening chapters of iconic texts such as Treasure Island (1883), The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and Peter Pan (1911) all take place in the home, and often the action ends there too. Yet the genre closest to the domestic novel may be the school story. Many family sagas, from Coolidge’s Katy books to the Australian Mary Grant Bruce’s Billabong series (1910–1942), contain episodes or even entire novels set in schools, and in some cases these schools may be indistinguishable from the home. Alcott’s Little Men (1871), for instance, takes place in the school founded by Jo and her husband in the home inherited from Jo’s aunt, and since the pupils include Jo’s sons, her niece and nephew, and her husband’s nephews, it is difficult to say where family child-rearing leaves off and education begins. Indeed, Allison Speicher (2017) has identified a mini-genre consisting of American children’s tales featuring romances between schoolboys and their female teachers, a pattern that extends the “discipline powered by love” (2011, p. 15) that Joe Sutliff Sanders examines in North American Golden Age texts about orphan girls.

      The English-language school story began in the eighteenth century with Fielding’s The Governess, the first full-length English novel for children. The school described here is tiny, private, and homelike; the pupils are essentially temporary sisters, and proprietress Mrs. Teachum privileges socialization over academics. Yet when we think of the nineteenth-century British school story, we are likely to contemplate works set in boys’ schools, from Harriet Martineau’s The Crofton Boys (1844) through Thomas Hughes’s Tom Brown’s Schooldays (1857), Frederic Farrar’s Eric, or Little by Little (1858), and Talbot Baines Reed’s The Fifth Form at St. Dominic’s (1881), to Rudyard Kipling’s Stalky & Co. (1899). From the 1880s through the 1930s, British children’s publishing witnessed a flood of boys’-school stories encouraged by factors including the new centrality of athletics to public schools’ character-building agenda and the founding of boys’ magazines such as the Boy’s Own Paper (BOP). Designed to attract middle-class boys as much as their poorer brethren, the BOP was a major forum for public-school fiction, as were rivals such as The Captain: A Magazine for Boys and Old Boys (1899–1924).