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Subversion or Socialization? Humor and Carnival in Morris Gleitzman’s Texts

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Abstract

Like their counterparts elsewhere, Australian children favour humorous novels; comedic writers consistently dominate the preteen and early teen fiction market in Australia. Regardless of its popularity, however, in comparison to more ‘serious’ writing, humorous literature has received little critical attention. Of the studies aimed at this area, most have tended to concentrate on the various stages of development in children’s preferences for humor, its strategies, forms and appeal, with very few examining the ideological assumptions informing particular texts. Yet, this article argues, humorous books are no less concerned with culture, value and meaning than any other kind of fiction for children. As Morris Gleitzman’s texts illustrate, by highlighting the cultural processes involved in the construction of language and meaning, inviting readers to play with ideas about language, social roles and behaviors, and creating characters who act in ways which are oppositional to usual socializing expectations, humorous literature, especially in carnivalized forms, has the potential to problematize unquestioning acceptance of various ideological para-digms, values, social practices and rules.

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James, K. Subversion or Socialization? Humor and Carnival in Morris Gleitzman’s Texts. Child Lit Educ 35, 367–379 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10583-004-6418-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10583-004-6418-x

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