Title of article :
Sense of Loss, Belonging, and Storytelling: An Anglo-Indian Narrator in The Borrowers
Author/Authors :
Kawabata، نويسنده , , Ariko، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
7
From page :
125
To page :
131
Abstract :
Mary Nortonʹs The Borrowers has a complicated narrative framework, through which the story of the small people, the Borrowers, is told. Once we find that the embedded story is carefully set at the turn of the nineteenth century, parallels with Burnettʹs The Secret Garden are recognized, in which a lonely Anglo-Indian child experiences some mysterious happenings in an old English country house. Sharing the cultural ambiguity and the sense of loss, both the Gardenʹs Mary and The Borrowersʹ Boy tell stories. Comparing the two works, I will explore the specific cultural meaning of the life of an Anglo-Indian child, and how it relates to the theme of The Borrowers.
Keywords :
Burnett , Norton , Anglo-Indian , Storytelling , Post-colonialism
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Record number :
827940
Link To Document :
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