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" NATURAL HISTORIES: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1086144
Doc. No : LA129773
Call No : ‭10.1163/156853500507799‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Debbie Sly
Title & Author : NATURAL HISTORIES: [Article] : LEARNING FROM ANIMALS IN T.H. WHITES ARTHURIAN SEQUENCE\ Debbie Sly
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology
Date : 2000
Volume/ Issue Number : 4/2
Page No : 146–163
Abstract : This paper examines the changes T.H. White made to The Sword in the Stone between its first publication in 1938 and subsequent appearance as the first part of the Once and Future King in 1958. These changes are related to the immediate historical context of World War II, and also to the wider context of children's literature dealing with the relationship between the child and the ''natural world''. Rather than seeing White's texts as reflecting a post-Enlightenment idealisation, placing both child and nature beyond the bounds of culture and human limitation, the essay argues that even in the first version White's medieval worldview is constructed from a sophisticated and deliberately anachronistic medley of discourses including medieval codes of hunting and chivalry, Renaissance tragedy and Victorian natural history. These combine to create an exclusively male world, which is analysed as part of the ideological construction of a masculine relationship to the environment based on a ''natural'' nstinct to hunt and kill. White's growing pacifism leads to the insertion in the later version of episodes replacing this relationship with models of cooperative animal behaviour, and even introducing a female mentor for the hero. This paper examines the changes T.H. White made to The Sword in the Stone between its first publication in 1938 and subsequent appearance as the first part of the Once and Future King in 1958. These changes are related to the immediate historical context of World War II, and also to the wider context of children's literature dealing with the relationship between the child and the ''natural world''. Rather than seeing White's texts as reflecting a post-Enlightenment idealisation, placing both child and nature beyond the bounds of culture and human limitation, the essay argues that even in the first version White's medieval worldview is constructed from a sophisticated and deliberately anachronistic medley of discourses including medieval codes of hunting and chivalry, Renaissance tragedy and Victorian natural history. These combine to create an exclusively male world, which is analysed as part of the ideological construction of a masculine relationship to the environment based on a ''natural'' nstinct to hunt and kill. White's growing pacifism leads to the insertion in the later version of episodes replacing this relationship with models of cooperative animal behaviour, and even introducing a female mentor for the hero.
Descriptor : CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
Descriptor : NATURAL HISTORY
Descriptor : T.H. WHITE
Descriptor : THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING
Descriptor : THE SWORD IN THE STONE
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/156853500507799‬
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10.1163-156853500507799_45408.pdf
10.1163-156853500507799.pdf
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