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El. knyga: Childhood, Agency, and Fantasy: Walking in Other Worlds

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Joining the emergent interdisciplinary investment in bridging the social sciences and the humanities, Childhood, Agency, and Fantasy: Walking in Other Worlds explores linkages between childrens agency and fantasy. Fantasy as an integral aspect of childhood and as a genre allows for childrens spectacular dreams and hopeful realities. Friendship, family, identity, loyalty, belongingness, and emotionality are central concepts explored in chapters that are anchored by humanities texts of television, film, and literature, but also by social science qualitative methods of participant observation and interviews. Fantasy has the capacity to be a revolutionary change agent that in its modernity can creatively reflect, critique, or reimagine the social, political, and cultural norms of our world. Such promise is also found to be true of childrens agency, wherein childrens beings and becomings, rooted in childhoods freedoms and constraints, result in a range of outcomes. In the endeavor to expand theory and research on childrens agency, fantasy becomes a point of possibility with its expanding subjectivities, far-reaching terrain, and spirit of adventure.
Acknowledgments ix
ADVENTURE/OTHERWORLD
2(38)
1 Where Do We Belong? Childhood Studies, Agency, Citizenry, and Fantasy
3(37)
Ingrid E. Castro
DREAM/GOOD VS. EVIL
40(32)
2 A Futile Rage against the Machine: The Triumph of The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T
41(31)
Peter W. Y. Lee
IMAGINATION/TRANSFORMATION
72(22)
3 Developing Children's Agency through Play with Imaginary Companions
73(21)
Kostas Magos
Sophia Kremmydiotou
HEROISM/SUPERNATURAL
94(22)
4 Arcadia Is in the Hands of Teenagers: Team Power in Guillermo del Toro's Trollhunters
95(21)
Tara Moore
MAGIC/JOURNEY
116(34)
5 The Boy Who Lives: Agentic Locations of Friendship Identity, Peer Culture, and Interpretive Reproduction in Harry Potter
117(33)
Ingrid E. Castro
MYTHOLOGY/QUEST
150(22)
6 All in the Family: The Agency of Demigods and Godlings in the Mythic World of Rick Riordan
151(21)
Michele D. Castleman
CONFLICT/JUSTICE
172(28)
7 Young People's Agency in Online Fan Spaces
173(27)
Parinita Shetty
PORTALS/TIME
200(26)
8 Girls' Agency through Supermobility: The Power of Imagined Futures in Young Adult Fantasy Literature
201(25)
Ida Fadzillah Leggett
MOVEMENT/POWER
226(37)
9 Being Scared in the Dark: Paradoxes, Perils, and the Promise of Fantasy for Urban Girls of Color
227(36)
Ingrid E. Castro
Ana Lilia Campos-Manzo
Index 263(14)
About the Contributors 277
Ingrid E. Castro is professor of sociology and chair of the Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work Department at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts.