3.8 Article

Slovenian Autobiographical Children's Fiction

Journal

PRIMERJALNA KNJIZEVNOST
Volume 46, Issue 2, Pages 137-156

Publisher

SLOVENE COMPARATIVE LITERATURE ASSOC
DOI: 10.3986/pkn.v46.i2.08

Keywords

Slovenian literature; autobiographical writing; children's fiction; Cankar

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The article discusses Slovenian autobiographical children's fiction and its emergence as part of the establishment of the aesthetic autonomy of writers. It analyzes five texts from different time periods and examines themes such as fragmentation, introspection, and the portrayal of the mother figure. The article also highlights the impact of the literary market on contemporary children's fiction.
The article discusses Slovenian autobiographical children's fiction which it defines as a subgenre of autobiographical fiction that thematizes childhood, is published for young readers or has crossed from adult to young audiences. This type of fiction emerged as a part of the process in which the model of the writer as an aesthetically autonomous artist was established. It flourished in the second half of the twentieth century and is almost completely absent from the contemporary Slovenian children's fiction. The article analyses five texts, namely Moje zivljenje (My Life, 1914) by Ivan Cankar, Solzice (Lilies of the Valley, 1949) by Prezihov Voranc, Pridi, mili moj Ariel (Come, my Gentle Ariel, 1965) by Mira Mihelic, Otrostvo (Childhood, 1996) by Franjo Francic, and Pink (Pink, 2008) by Janja Vidmar. In Cankar's and Prezih's texts, which are proposed as the generic prototypes of this subgenre, the fragmentation and lyricism of the narrative, introspection, the specific duality of the chronotope and the figure of the mother as the personification of the narrator's central val- ues are examined. Mira Mihelic introduces a new type of female protagonist and the figure of the absent mother, whereas Francic presents motifs of a dys-functional family and uses the description of the youth correctional facilities to imply disagreement with the prevailing state ideology. Janja Vidmar's text functions within a new model of the literary system which is characterized by the dictates of the book market success.

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