Fighting For Hope: The Chronicles of Narnia and the Harry Potter Series as Transformative Works for Child Readers Traumatized by War Fighting For Hope: The Chronicles of Narnia and the Harry Potter Series as Transformative Works for Child Readers Traumatized by War

Fighting For Hope: The Chronicles of Narnia and the Harry Potter Series as Transformative Works for Child Readers Traumatized by War

    • 2.0 • 3 Ratings

Publisher Description

Whether victims, aggressors, or observers, most children in the world have had exposure, in one way or another, to the devastating effects of war. Children’s literature depicting war, with children filling the roles of warrior heroes, serves not only to entertain and inspire, but also to help readers make meaningful connections between their own individuality and their culture, community, and circumstances. In “Ghosts, Gremlins, and ‘the War on Terror’ in Children’s Blitz Fiction,” Kristine Miller says, “Because children bring to their reading a much less developed sense of either the self or its social communities than adult readers do, they need fiction not to shock and awaken them to possibilities but instead to teach them how to construct both personal and social identity in an unstable and war-torn world” (274). Such novels can assuage the trauma incurred through the child readers’ firsthand experiences of warfare, or help alleviate the fear and confusion that lurk in the hearts of children exposed to violent conflict through more common means such as television.

In The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis and the Harry Potter series from J.K. Rowling, tales of child warriors battling evil are set within a buffered fantasy world, creating a safe haven for child readers to explore, frame, and define their own fears. In “On Fairy Stories,” J.R.R Tolkien claims that fairy stories allow children to set sail on an “appointed journey” through which wisdom and dignity are gained by confrontations with “peril, sorrow, and the shadow of death” (67). The Chronicles of Narnia and the Harry Potter series take child readers on just such an “appointed journey,” bringing them face to face with violence and bloodshed perpetrated by not only by villains, but by child characters in the fantasy worlds of Narnia and Hogwarts, where children are considered worthy and capable of becoming warriors who battle the forces of evil. In these novels, child characters are driven by the knowledge that only they can save their worlds from destruction, and because they are placed in positions of authority and leadership, their examples ultimately offer the possibility of empowerment to child readers lost in feelings of helplessness in the real world.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2014
5 November
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
160
Pages
PUBLISHER
Erin Brownlee
SELLER
Draft2Digital, LLC
SIZE
230.2
KB
The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books
2010
On Writers and Writing On Writers and Writing
2015
The Heroine with 1001 Faces The Heroine with 1001 Faces
2021
Start Here: Read Your Way Into 25 Amazing Authors Start Here: Read Your Way Into 25 Amazing Authors
2012
Literature, the Humanities, and Humanity Literature, the Humanities, and Humanity
2013
How to Read Literature Like a Professor Revised How to Read Literature Like a Professor Revised
2014
The Boy Who Loved Harry Potter The Boy Who Loved Harry Potter
2017
A Preposterous Portfolio of Parodies: Free Selections from Spoofs of The Hobbit, Game of Thrones, Harry Potter, Star Trek and More A Preposterous Portfolio of Parodies: Free Selections from Spoofs of The Hobbit, Game of Thrones, Harry Potter, Star Trek and More
2014
Lego Harry Potter Lego Harry Potter
2017
The Land of Wizards & Witches The Land of Wizards & Witches
2013
Harry Potter Pop Out Harry Potter Pop Out
2020
Insider's Guide to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter Insider's Guide to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter
2012