be_themoon: I want a better world. By me. (Misc: Pic: sunrise through the mist)
[personal profile] be_themoon
Apparently, when I have no school to do but yet need something to do - I do sort-of school anyways. In this case, research for a paper that might never get written, about the prevalence of children's stories in which at the end most/all of the protagonists either choose to leave or are forcibly kicked out of the fantasy land they have found. exhibit a, naturally, being Narnia. I even have a timeline now! For series, the date is the year of the first book's publishing.

1865 - Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. English, forcible eviction.
1900 - Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum. American, chooses to return home.
1904 - Peter Pan (the play) by J. M. Barrie. English, chooses to return home. (The book adaptation was published 1911.)
1950 - Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis. English, forcible eviction.
1965 - The Dark Is Rising by Susan Cooper. English, forcible eviction.

Anyone know of other children's literature, at any point in time, in which the children find a different world and have to leave it at the end?

Date: 2010-01-07 06:37 pm (UTC)
ext_80109: (Criminal Minds: team: looking for answer)
From: [identity profile] be-themoon.livejournal.com
scholarly pursuiiiiit! it is fun and fascinating. :D His Dark Materials does fit, though perhaps not quite as easily as the others. still, they are definitely banished - from each other, and from the various worlds. hmmm. *works into equations*

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