Scarecrow Press / Children's Literature Association
Pages: 368
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8108-5428-4 • Hardback • April 2006 • $98.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-4616-5993-8 • eBook • April 2006 • $93.00 • (£72.00)
C. Anita Tarr is an associate professor of English at Illinois State University, where she teaches children's and young adult literature with additional specialties in fantasy and science fiction, poetry, and women's studies.
Donna R. White teaches young adult literature, linguistics, science fiction and fantasy, and writing at Arkansas Tech University.
Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: In His Own Time
Chapter 3 1. Child-Hating: Peter Pan in the Context of Victorian Hatred
Chapter 4 2. The Time of His Life: Peter Pan and the Decadent Nineties
Chapter 5 3. Babes in Boy-Land: J.M. Barrie and the Edwardian Girl
Chapter 6 4. James Barrie's Pirates: Peter Pan's Place in Pirate History and Lore
Chapter 7 5. More Darkly down the Left Arm: The Duplicity of Fairyland in the Plays of J.M. Barrie
Part 8 Part II: In and Out of Time—Peter Pan in America
Chapter 9 6. Problematizing Piccaninnies, or How J.M. Barrie Uses Graphemes to Counter Racism in Peter Pan
Chapter 10 7. The Birth of a Lost Boy: Traces of J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan in Willa Cather's The Professor's House
Part 11 Part III: Timelessness and Timeliness of Peter Pan
Chapter 12 8. The Pang of Stone Words
Chapter 13 9. Playing in Neverland: Peter Pan Video Game Revisions
Chapter 14 10. The Riddle of His Being: An Exploration of Pter Pan's Perpetually Altering State
Chapter 15 11. Getting Peter's Goat: Hybridity, Androgyny, and Terror in Peter Pan
Chapter 16 12. Peter Pan, Pullman, and Potter: Anxieties of Growing Up
Chapter 17 13. The Blot of Peter Pan
Part 18 Part IV: Women's Time
Chapter 19 14. The Kiss: Female Sexuality and Power in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan
Chapter 20 15. The Female Figure in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan: The Small and the Mighty
Part 21 Index
Part 22 About the Contributors
Academic libraries that support the scholarly study of children's and Edwardian literature will want this multifaceted study...
— School Library Journal, January 2007
The combined work of the book's eighteen contributors...exemplifies not only how this children's classic continues to fascinate young readers, but why Peter Pan is also a surprisingly—often shockingly—adult story.
— English Literature In Transition, Vol. 50, No. 2 (2007)
This collection of essays featuring contributions by young, mostly American scholars marks the centenary of the first publication of the play Peter Pan (1904).
— Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature, Vol. 45, No. 4, 2007
This new centenary collection provides appropriately rich and protean responses to its subject, the most fruitful of them investigating the textual, narrative, and linguistic challenges presented by the many-faceted and multiple versions of Peter Pan. Donna White and Anita Tarr deserve our thanks for compiling an exemplary collection of essays....Peter Pan in and out of Time exhibits the richness and variety that can come with maturity, in this case, critical maturity. At the same time that this essay collection provides a fitting tribute to the durability of the Peter Pan mythos and the complex of desires and fears it encodes, it also provides entertaining, incisive, and useful ways of understanding this complex of texts.
— Children's Literature Association Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Spring 2007)
...a seminal collection that adds to the growing scholarship on children's literature and attests to the popularity of and growing interest in literature for children. It is a work that is informed by scholarship and research of which only experts are capable; but is addressed to all...the book is a great accomplishment and deserves praise.
— 2007; H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
...academic readers will find this book useful.
— Literary Criticism