Never-Ending Pixie Dust. A Critical Analysis of Motherhood and Its Complexities in “Peter Pan” Never-Ending Pixie Dust. A Critical Analysis of Motherhood and Its Complexities in “Peter Pan”

Never-Ending Pixie Dust. A Critical Analysis of Motherhood and Its Complexities in “Peter Pan‪”‬

    • $25.99
    • $25.99

Publisher Description

The role of the “mother-woman” in nineteenth century literature is constantly complexified. But who is the audience? For whom are we preserving the mother-myth and what are the parameters of doing so? This inquiry gave way to an investigation on an audience that, perhaps, was not intended to be targeted in such a way: children. Undeniably, though, it was.

This paper explores the way in which Sir James Matthew Barrie's novel "Peter Pan" aims at children to both perpetuate and dismiss the myth of the mother woman as a singular role, while expanding the girl-child’s power beyond earthly realms.

The paper analyses the gender roles as they are presented in “Peter Pan”, the role of the mother-woman and the influence the characters of Peter and Wendy continue to have on children.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2015
October 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
26
Pages
PUBLISHER
GRIN Verlag
SELLER
Open Publishing GmbH
SIZE
304.3
KB
The Maternal Voice in Victorian Fiction The Maternal Voice in Victorian Fiction
2013
Textual Mothers/Maternal Texts Textual Mothers/Maternal Texts
2011
The Submerged Plot and the Mother's Pleasure from Jane Austen to Arundhati Roy The Submerged Plot and the Mother's Pleasure from Jane Austen to Arundhati Roy
2016
Maternal Representations in Twenty-First Century Broadway Musicals Maternal Representations in Twenty-First Century Broadway Musicals
2019
Alice McDermott's Fiction Alice McDermott's Fiction
2018
Written Maternal Authority and Eighteenth-Century Education in Britain Written Maternal Authority and Eighteenth-Century Education in Britain
2016