Mirror, Mirror, Who’s the Greatest Power of them All?

Emily Fuller
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Abstract

In the broader field of trauma theory, trauma is often characterised as an event that is physical, violent, and sporadic. However, feminist trauma theorists have argued that there are other forms of trauma inflicted by ideological systems such as patriarchy, resulting in less transparent versions of the traumatic. Fantasy literature, particularly children’s fantasy, has a potential to construct new visions of society that transcend these patriarchal systems for their young female heroines, and to reveal the functions of patriarchal trauma. By applying feminist trauma theory to children’s fantasy literature, this article exposes the subtler and more nuanced ways in which trauma operates, extending beyond understandings of physical and overt violence. The article offers a close reading of Jessica Townsend’s Nevermoor books (2017-2020)—a seminal Australian series that has risen to acclaim for its inclusivity, unconventional representations of gender, and creative world-building since its debut. I argue that Townsend repurposes the tropes of the fantasy genre in the Nevermoor series to hold a mirror to the harmful effects of patriarchy and the gendered violence it perpetuates. As a result, it rejects the common characterisation of trauma as overtly physical, violent, and sporadic. Rather, the series suggests that the representation of trauma in children’s literature, especially middle-grade fiction, is also gendered, and the direct consequence of patriarchy.
魔镜,魔镜,谁是最强大的力量?
在更广泛的创伤理论领域,创伤通常被描述为身体上的、暴力的、零星的事件。然而,女权主义创伤理论家认为,还有其他形式的创伤是由意识形态系统造成的,如父权制,导致创伤的不太透明的版本。幻想文学,尤其是儿童幻想文学,有可能为年轻的女主人公构建超越父权制度的社会新视野,并揭示父权创伤的功能。通过将女权主义创伤理论应用于儿童幻想文学,本文揭示了创伤运作的更微妙和更细致入微的方式,超出了对身体和公开暴力的理解。本文仔细阅读了杰西卡·汤森的《永无荒原》系列小说(2017-2020)——这是一部影响深远的澳大利亚系列小说,自首次亮相以来,因其包容性、对性别的非传统表现和创造性的世界构建而备受赞誉。我认为Townsend在《Nevermoor》系列中重新使用了幻想类型的比喻,以反映父权制的有害影响及其持续存在的性别暴力。因此,它否定了创伤的常见特征,即明显的身体上的、暴力的和零星的。相反,该系列表明,儿童文学,尤其是中学小说中创伤的表现,也是性别化的,是父权制的直接后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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