Not No Rapunzel

Meridians ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-347
Author(s):  
Laura Halperin

Abstract In this article, Laura Halperin reads Chicana writer Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street as a disidentificatory, revisionist, and intersectional collection of fairy tales. Halperin builds on critical scholarship about The House on Mango Street and fairy tales and inflects a U.S. Third World feminist analysis by examining how the narrative draws attention to the ways gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, and class are entwined. Rather than view the text as an outright rejection of the dubious premises and promises provided by fairy tales—individualist, (hetero)sexist, classist, and racist ones—she argues that the book references such tales at length to highlight their widespread power while also challenging their problematic ideologies. The simultaneous engagement with and contestation of these stories are what makes Cisneros’s text revisionist and disidentificatory, and Cisneros’s attention to the particular concerns faced by impoverished females of color makes the text intersectional. The two tales with which Cisneros most explicitly engages are “Cinderella” and “Rapunzel,” and the two central images in her collection are shoes and windows. The House on Mango Street also references other stories and rhymes, including “Little Red Riding Hood,” “Peter Pan,” “The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe,” Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass, and The Little House, just as it invokes Mexican (American) folklore and Greek and Roman mythology. Cisneros’s mimetic repetition of these narratives underscores their pervasiveness and allure while critiquing the myths they advance.

Author(s):  
Tatiana Belova ◽  

The paper comprises versatile intertextual connections between Lewis Carroll’s fairy tales (“Alice in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking Glass”) and Nabokov’s novels as regards their system of images, leitmotivs and key-words, similar poetic principles and elements of structure, artistically implemented by Vladimir Nabokov in the text with the purpose of demonstrating the infinite resources of the language as the instrument of creation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 312-323
Author(s):  
Friederike Frenzel

Abstract Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking-Glass,” and J. M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan” are highly critiqued and explored works of British children literature. Both queer and hermeneutic readings allow approaches that intrinsically question gender dichotomies, providing tools to pick out underlying themes. Thus, focusing on the concepts of the “child hero” and the “genderless child” of Carroll’s and Barrie’s respective Victorian and Edwardian backgrounds, spatial – the dream worlds of the Wonder- and the Looking-Glass land, the colonized Island of Neverland – as well as temporal aspects – the linear, episodic quest of Alice, the immortal, cyclical existence of Peter – point to the subversive elements of play, memory, and narration in the texts. While Alice is bridging dream and reality in an oscillating, paradoxical act of self-aware transformation, Peter is otherworldly and inhuman himself, actively rejecting heteronormative standards and demands. Both are trespassers and assume roles, and confuse, adapt, and bend supposedly fixed rules. Their transgressions are subdued in the pretended ahistoricity of children’s storytelling, referring to the responsibility of adaptions to further expand the hermeneutical circle.


2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taylor W. Hargrove, MA ◽  
Tyson H. Brown, PhD

<br clear="all" /><p> </p><p> <strong>Objective: </strong>Previous research has docu­mented a relationship between childhood socioeconomic conditions and adult health, but less is known about racial/ethnic dif­ferences in this relationship, particularly among men. This study utilizes a life course approach to investigate racial/ethnic differ­ences in the relationships among early and later life socioeconomic circumstances and health in adulthood among men.</p><p><strong>Design: </strong>Panel data from the Health and Retirement Study and growth curve models are used to examine group differences in the relationships among childhood and adult socioeconomic factors and age-tra­jectories of self-rated health among White, Black and Mexican American men aged 51-77 years (<em>N</em>=4147).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Multiple measures of childhood socioeconomic status (SES) predict health in adulthood for White men, while significant­ly fewer measures of childhood SES predict health for Black and Mexican American men. Moreover, the health consequences of childhood SES diminish with age for Black and Mexican American men. The child­hood SES-adult health relationship is largely explained by measures of adult SES for White men.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>The life course pathways link­ing childhood SES and adult health differ by race/ethnicity among men. Similar to argu­ments that the universality of the adult SES-health relationship should not be assumed, results from our study suggest that scholars should not assume that the significance and nature of the association between child­hood SES and health in adulthood is similar across race/ethnicity among men.<em> Ethn Dis.</em>2015;25(3):313-320.</p>


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vy Kim Nguyen ◽  
Adam Kahana ◽  
Julien Heidt ◽  
Katelyn Polemi ◽  
Jacob Kvasnicka ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundStark racial disparities in disease incidence among American women remains a persistent public health challenge. These disparities likely result from complex interactions between genetic, social, lifestyle, and environmental risk factors. The influence of environmental risk factors, such as chemical exposure, however, may be substantial and is poorly understood.ObjectivesWe quantitatively evaluated chemical-exposure disparities by race/ethnicity and age in United States (US) women by using biomarker data for 143 chemicals from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2014.MethodsWe applied a series of survey-weighted, generalized linear models using data from the entire NHANES women population and age-group stratified subpopulations. The outcome was chemical biomarker concentration and the main predictor was race/ethnicity with adjustment for age, socioeconomic status, smoking habits, and NHANES cycle.ResultsThe highest disparities across non-Hispanic Black, Mexican American, Other Hispanic, and other race/multiracial women were observed for pesticides and their metabolites, including 2,5-dichlorophenol, o,p’-DDE, beta-hexachlorocyclohexane, and 2,4-dichlorophenol, along with personal care and consumer product compounds. The latter included parabens, monoethyl phthalate, and several metals, such as mercury and arsenic. Moreover, for Mexican American, Other Hispanic, and non-Hispanic black women, there were several exposure disparities that persisted across age groups, such as higher 2,4- and 2,5-dichlorophenol concentrations. Exposure differences for methyl and propyl parabens, however, were the starkest between non-Hispanic black and non-Hispanic white children with average differences exceeding 4 folds.DiscussionsWe systematically evaluated differences in chemical exposures across women of various race/ethnic groups and across age groups. Our findings could help inform chemical prioritization in designing epidemiological and toxicological studies. In addition, they could help guide public health interventions to reduce environmental and health disparities across populations.


1980 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Drakakis-Smith

This paper was written immediately following an extensive period of fieldwork in the small Australian town of Alice Springs. It was deliberately written before most of the statistical results of various surveys were available in order to crystallise the less quantifiable impressions and features of the Aboriginal position in the town around a conceptual framework of societal relations. The few studies of urban Aborigines to date have been more descriptive than analytical. To this end, and based upon my own previous field experiences, I have borrowed from contemporary Third World studies the notions of marginality and marginalisation, and assessed the situation in Alice Springs in these terms. The reasons for this particular choice of concepts was partly because of the location of Alice Springs in ‘colonial’ Australia but primarily because of the etymological and philosophical links with the prevailing opinion of most Aborigines in Alice Springs as fringe dwellers—people on the margins of the town and its society. There have been few attempts to examine the position of Aborigines in contemporary Australia in conceptual terms and this effort will undoubtedly have many shortcomings. However, its purpose is not to be definitive but rather to stimulate further investigation and discussion.


2017 ◽  
pp. 155-167
Author(s):  
Sarah Dunnigan

In his obituary of J. M. Barrie, George Bernard Shaw called his plays ‘terrifying’. Although Peter Pan (first performed in 1904) had long become a cherished children’s fantasy and a staple of Christmas theatricals, Shaw seemed more perturbed than enchanted by it (1993: 151). Barrie is seldom described as a Gothic writer, although his own well-known and often reductively understood biography has been ‘Gothicised’ into a dark psycho-narrative. Rather than use the latter to suggest Barrie’s election to the Scottish Gothic canon, this chapter takes its cue from recent work by R. D. S. Jack (2010), Valentina Bold and Andrew Nash (2014) and others, who demonstrate how Barrie is a writer of complexity and contradiction. The generic and thematic range of Barrie’s writing means that he is not a consistent or fully fledged Gothic writer but nevertheless Gothicism still inks a recurrent pattern of motifs and ideas in his work.


Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 141 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
William Boyer ◽  
Michael R Richardson ◽  
James R Churilla ◽  
Lindsay Toth ◽  
Eugene Fitzhugh ◽  
...  

Introduction: Previous studies have revealed a significant, inverse dose-response relationship between total activity counts/day (TAC/d) and several cardiometabolic risk factors (CMRF). An ongoing line of research is the examination of the contributions of behavioral, environmental, and physiological factors to CMRF differences across race-ethnicity. However, it is unknown if these differences exist among the most physically active adults. Hypothesis: Among the most active U.S. adults, we hypothesize that CMRF measures will differ across race-ethnic groups. Methods: Study sample (n=1,059) included adult (20-79 years of age) participants from the 2003-2006 NHANES who wore an ActiGraph model 7164 accelerometer on the right hip. The top quartile of accelerometer-derived age- and gender-specific TAC/d was used as a cutpoint to define the “most active”. All participants were without T2D (fasting glucose <126 mg/dL, no medication, no self-reported diagnosis) and without CVD (self-report). CMRF included HOMA-IR, fasting insulin and glucose, systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), HDL, LDL, triglycerides, BMI, waist circumference (WC) and C-reactive protein (CRP). Multiple linear regression was used to examine CMRF differences between non-Hispanic white (NHW), non-Hispanic black (NHB) and Mexican American (MA) participants. Regression models were adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking, wear time, BMI (except BMI and WC models), objectively-measure MVPA (≥760 counts/min) and race-ethnicity. Results: No significant differences were found in mean TAC/d across race-ethnicity. When compared to NHW, NHB had significantly higher HOMA-IR, fasting insulin, SBP, WC, and BMI. Compared to NHW, MA had significantly higher HOMA-IR, fasting insulin, triglycerides, WC and BMI. When comparing NHB to MA, MA had significantly higher triglycerides and HDL and significantly lower SBP. Conclusions: It has been proposed that the race-ethnic differences in PA participation could be contributing to disparities in elevated CMRF, but even among U.S. adults in the 75th percentile for total activity volume (i.e. TAC/d), race-ethnic differences in CMRF still exist. It is probable that other social, environmental, and genetic factors are responsible for moderating the beneficial effects PA has on CMRF specifically among NHB and MA adults.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 881-888
Author(s):  
William Boyer ◽  
James Churilla ◽  
Amy Miller ◽  
Trevor Gillum ◽  
Marshare Penny

Background: The effects of aerobic physical activity (PA) and muscular strengthening activity (MSA) on all-cause mortality risk need further exploration among ethnically diverse populations. Purpose: To examine potential effect modification of race-ethnicity on meeting the PA guidelines and on all-cause mortality. Methods: The study sample (N = 14,384) included adults (20–79 y of age) from the 1999–2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. PA was categorized into 6 categories based on the 2018 PA guidelines: category 1 (inactive), category 2 (insufficient PA and no MSA), category 3 (active and no MSA), category 4 (no PA and sufficient MSA), category 5 (insufficient PA and sufficient MSA), and category 6 (meeting both recommendations). Race-ethnic groups examined included non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Mexican American. Cox-proportional hazard models were used. Results: Significant risk reductions were found for categories 2, 3, and 6 for non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black. Among Mexican American, significant risk reductions were found in category 6. Conclusion: In support of the 2018 PA guidelines, meeting both the aerobic PA and MSA guidelines significantly reduced risk for all-cause mortality independent of race-ethnicity. The effects of aerobic PA alone seem to be isolated to non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black.


2005 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-18
Author(s):  
Max Liddell ◽  
Chris Goddard

This article analyses the Australian Government’s communications on children in immigration detention, particularly those detained at Woomera and Baxter Detention Centres. The authors examine paradoxes and ‘double-bind’ theory; theory which analyses communications which continually put the target of them in the wrong and allow no escape. The analysis uses selected passages from Lewis Carroll’s ‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘Through the Looking Glass’ to highlight the nature and impact of such communication. The authors conclude that the Australian Government has consistently used paradoxical communication. In doing so it has placed children and families in detention, child protection workers, the South Australian Government, and sometimes external critics in a communication trap from which it is difficult to escape. Other bodies such as Courts have also demonstrated much paradox in their behaviour and communications on detention issues.


Author(s):  
Daria Kasianova

The article discusses the features and basic requirements for the design of children's books. For example, was selected to the book by Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland." The purpose of this work: an analysis of the features of decoration of children's books by the example of author's illustrations to the tale of Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland" in connection with the upcoming celebration of the 150 year anniversary of the publication of the book in 1865. To achieve this goal has been studied history of fairy tales. Attention is paid to the choice of a suitable translation into Russian. Because the book is based entirely on English puns and witticisms, folklore, linguistic and philological subtleties, it is hard to understand Russian readers, and even more so for children. The analysis of the existing analogue illustrations and prototypes of the main characters of fairy tales. Detailed history of the characters. Studied costumes of the characters of the 19th century, faithfully reproduce the historical era. Together illustrations adapted to the modern reader. The examples of stylized characters. Defined the main age group of readers for whom the book is intended. In this regard, consider age features and requirements for registration. Formed the basic concept of decoration. It is the desire to approach most closely to the original text, and not to deviate from the real prototype in the direction of the stereotypical characters, falsely taken as a model to follow. At the same time reflects the problem of conformity visuals and content of the book. As the techniques of performing multi-layered watercolor technique chosen.


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