La Trobe

Reading the Reading Girl: From Frances Hodgson Burnett's Little Editha to Hermione Granger and Her Fans

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-30, 05:41 authored by Caroline McAlister
This article opens with Lady Macbeth, followed by a classic nineteenth-century story of a precocious and adorable reformer, followed by a mid-twentieth-century protagonist of prodigious intellectual potential. These formidable female heroes (or anti-heroes, as the case may be) offer precedent and foundation for the primary focus of Caroline McAlister's article: Hermione Granger and the Reading Girl. Using all of these "reading girls" as lenses for her study, McAlister explores the intersections between the ostensibly passive activity of reading and the active worlds of creation and engagement, offering an unprecedented nuance to Barthes' idea of writerly text. Editha, Matilda, and Hermione all approach their worlds primarily through the book, but none of them stays securely within that textual space. Each is called out of the text to make changes in the people and institutions of her world; just as each is called, of course, each calls to her readers to make active spaces for them...

History

Journal

The Looking Glass : New Perspectives on Children's Literature

ISSN

1551-5680

Volume

16

Issue

2

Publisher

La Trobe University

Section Title

Alice's Academy

Author Biography

Caroline McAlister has a Ph.D. in English from Emory University. She is an instructor at Guilford College in Greensboro, North Carolina. She has published two picture books for children, Holy Mole! and Brave Donatella and the Jasmine Thief. Her research interests include Milton, Shakespeare, and Children's Literature

Date Created

2012-12-07

Rights Statement

Essays and articles published in The Looking Glass may be reproduced for non-profit use by any educational or public institution; letters to the editor and on-site comments made by our readers may not be used without the expressed permission of that individual. Any commercial use of this journal, in whole or in part, by any means, is prohibited. Authors of accepted articles assign to The Looking Glass the right to publish and distribute their text electronically and to archive and make it permanently available electronically. They retain the copyright and, 90 days after initial publication, may republish it in any form they wish as long as The Looking Glass is acknowledged as the original source.

Data source

OJS data migration 2025: https://ojs.latrobe.edu.au/ojs/index.php/tlg/article/view/325

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