Teaching YA Cancer Narratives: The Fault in Our Stars and Issues with Voicing Illness

Lynnette Lounsbury, Carolyn Rickett, P. Race, Paul Bogacs
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Abstract

Increasingly publishers are promoting illness as a commodifiable literary product. There is now a wide range of autobiographical and fictional texts that explore life-threatening illnesses from the embodied perspective of protagonists. This trend is also evidenced in the content of young adult literature where concepts of the diseased self, agency and mortality are explored. The aim of this paper is to provide some background context on illness narratives and offer a close reading of the young adult text, The Fault in our Stars by John Green, in order to highlight important issues such as the accurate and realistic portrayal of cancer, particularly in the lived experience of adolescent readers. It is anticipated that this discussion will allow classroom teachers to engage more fully in conversations about text selection and content, and the ways in which literature can advance realistic representation of illness that previously Teaching YA cancer narratives: The Fault in Our Stars and issues with voicing illness Lynnette Lounsbury lynnette.lounsbury@avondale.edu.au
教青少年癌症叙事:我们的星星的错误和发声疾病的问题
越来越多的出版商将疾病作为一种可商品化的文学产品来推广。现在有大量的自传体和虚构文本从主人公的具体角度探讨危及生命的疾病。这种趋势也体现在青少年文学的内容中,其中探讨了患病的自我、代理和死亡的概念。本文的目的是提供一些关于疾病叙事的背景背景,并对约翰·格林的年轻成人文本《星运中的过错》进行仔细阅读,以突出重要问题,如对癌症的准确和现实的描绘,特别是在青少年读者的生活经历中。预计这一讨论将允许课堂教师更充分地参与到关于文本选择和内容的对话中,以及文学可以促进疾病的现实表现的方式,之前教YA癌症叙事:我们的星星的错误和发声疾病的问题Lynnette Lounsbury lynnette.lounsbury@avondale.edu.au
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