A Shared Passion for Nonsense: Laura E. Richards and Margaret Atwood

This article opens up a transnational and transhistorical dialogue between the two North American women authors Laura E. Richards and Margaret Atwood regarding their shared passion for literary nonsense. I argue that reading Richards’s and Atwood’s nonsense alongside each other highlights the contin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michaela Keck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2024-12-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/22774
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Summary:This article opens up a transnational and transhistorical dialogue between the two North American women authors Laura E. Richards and Margaret Atwood regarding their shared passion for literary nonsense. I argue that reading Richards’s and Atwood’s nonsense alongside each other highlights the continuity of nonsense’s characteristic duality of subversion and dominance as well as the ongoing social and sexual violence that surrounds their young female protagonists, whose (sexual) agency challenges constructions of “childhood innocence.” Yet where Richards purportedly relates her children’s poetry to the domestic sphere as the proper site to express nonsense and wields it as a creative educational practice, Atwood’s fiction self-reflectively insists that nonsense constitutes a powerful political instrument and weapon in and beyond the nursery.
ISSN:1991-9336