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Robyn McCallum Robyn McCallum i(A6511 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Adaptations for Young Audiences : Critical Challenges, Future Directions Robyn McCallum , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: International Research in Children's Literature , December vol. 9 no. 2 2016; (p. 197-214)

'Historically, literary sources have always provided a rich resource for film narratives, meaning that the history of cinema is closely intertwined with the history of film adaptation. Children’s literature in particular has been a favoured source of represented narratives. Some of the earliest film adaptations were of children’s texts, many of which have been readapted multiple times. Adaptation studies has been a growth area of scholarly research and debate for at least five decades. However, despite the close imbrication of the film industry and children’s literature since the early twentieth century, few adaptation scholars have turned their attention to the rich resource that children’s and youth culture provides. This paper surveys dominant shifts in approaches to adaptation, in particular the shift from ‘fidelity criticism’ to a dialogic intertextual approach; the recent move back to a modified form of ‘fidelity criticism’; and the cultural work that has thus far been achieved in the field of adaptation studies and children’s and youth culture. In doing so it examines the critical challenges faced by scholars in the field and the potent possibilities future scholarship might pursue.'

Source: Edinburgh University Press.

1 1 y separately published work icon New World Orders in Contemporary Children's Literature : Utopian Transformations Clare Bradford , Kerry Mallan , John Stephens , Robyn McCallum , Houndmills : Palgrave Macmillan , 2008 Z1559477 2008 selected work criticism 'New World Orders shows how texts for children and young people have responded to the cultural, economic, and political movements of the last 15 years. With a focus on international children's texts produced between 1988 and 2006, the authors discuss how utopian and dystopian tropes are pressed into service to project possible futures to child readers. The book considers what these texts have to say about globalisation, neocolonialism, environmental issues, pressures on families and communities, and the idea of the posthuman.' - Back cover.
1 The Struggle to be Human in a Post-Human World Robyn McCallum , Victoria Flanagan , John Stephens , 2006 single work criticism
— Appears in: CREArTA : Journal of the Centre for Research and Education in the Arts , vol. 6 no. 2006; (p. 28-44)
1 'There Are Worse Things than Ghosts' : reworking Horror Chronotopes in Australian Children's Fiction John Stephens , Robyn McCallum , 2001 single work criticism
— Appears in: Mystery in Children's Literature : From the Rational to the Supernatural 2001; (p. 165-183)
1 Ethnicity, Agency, and Cultural Identity : Nexus and Difference in Australian Youth Films Robyn McCallum , 1998 single work criticism
— Appears in: Papers : Explorations into Children's Literature , August vol. 8 no. 2 1998; (p. 40-47)
McCallum is interested in texts which deal with narratives of migration and cultural difference and representations of social and cultural diversity in children's literature, as '...attempts in film and literature to represent cultural diversity in Australian society are apt to proceed through quotation of iconic and stereo-typed images of difference...' (40). She analyses three Australian films, No Worries, Captain Johnno, and On Loan and argues that fundamentally the 'representations of social and cultural difference are ideologically shaped by an overarching metanarrative of subject formation which stresses the value of intersubjective relationships as a way of overcoming the alienation that occurs from cultural, social and physical displacement' (46).
1 Cultural Solipsism, National Identities and the Discourse of Multiculturalism in Australian Picture Books Robyn McCallum , 1997 single work criticism
— Appears in: Ariel , January vol. 28 no. 1 1997; (p. 101-116)
1 Other Selves: Subjectivity and the 'Doppelganger' in Australian Adolescent Fiction Robyn McCallum , 1996 single work criticism
— Appears in: Writing the Australian Child : Texts and Contexts in Fictions for Children 1996; (p. 17-36)
1 [In]quest of the Subject: The Dialogic Construction of Subjectivity in Caroline Macdonald's 'Speaking to Miranda' Robyn McCallum , 1992 single work criticism
— Appears in: Papers : Explorations into Children's Literature , [December] vol. 3 no. 3 1992; (p. 99-105)
McCallum examines "the narrative strategies used by Macdonald [in Speaking to Miranda] to represent the complex processes through which subjectivity is constructed out of a range of appropriated discourses, images, voices, memories and desires".
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