Logo image
An eye for an I: Neil Gaiman's Coraline and Questions of Identity
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

An eye for an I: Neil Gaiman's Coraline and Questions of Identity

David Rudd
Children's Literature in Education, Vol.39(3), pp.159-168
09/2008

Abstract

Uncanny Lacan Psychoanalysis Abject Kristeva Freud Childrens Literature
This paper sees Neil Gaiman's Coraline as following a darker tradition in children's literature, most commonly found in the fairy tale. It explores some of the existential issues that concern us all: to do with identity, sex, death, ontology, evil, desire and violence. The article takes a largely psychoanalytical approach, showing how Freud's concept of the Uncanny is particularly helpful in explaining both the text's appeal, and its creepy uneasiness. Namely, our fears about existence and identity as separate beings: our worry that we will either not be noticed (being invisible and isolated), or we will be completely consumed by the attention of another. Lacan's concepts of the Symbolic and the Real provide the theoretical underpinning for this reading, together with Kristeva's notion of the abject.
pdf
emcs_journals-1.pdfDownloadView
Open Access
url
Link to Published VersionView
Published (Version of record)Publisher sites may require subscription to read content

Metrics

28 File views/ downloads
134 Record Views
23 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy