In:Emotion in Texts for Children and Young Adults: Moving stories
Edited by Karen Coats and Gretchen Papazian
[Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition 13] 2023
► pp. 130–151
Chapter 6Sad girls
Melancholy and adolescence in Skating the Edge and Touching Earth Lightly
Published online: 6 January 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/clcc.13.06den
https://doi.org/10.1075/clcc.13.06den
Abstract
This chapter explores melancholy’s rich signifying potential beyond psychoanalytic frameworks. To do so, it explores its expression as a unique cluster of emotions characterised by sadness without a clear cause in both Julia Lawrinson’s Skating the Edge (2002) and Margo Lanagan’s Touching Earth Lightly (1996). In both books, melancholy girl protagonists are confronted with the death of a friend, mobilizing a journey towards happiness that is, I argue, emblematic of the way Western society treats girls and their feelings. Because girls are subjugated as both adolescents and women, their feelings – especially those deemed bad, unnecessary, or indulgent – are strenuously policed. Situating my analysis within discussions of the centrality of happiness (or at least its promise) to Western neoliberalism, I show how feelings that might be radical or resistant must be sacrificed in order to achieve ‘successful’ adult womanhood, marked by pursuits of work, romance, and happiness.
Article outline
- Introduction
- The pursuit of unhappiness
- Girls and feelings
- Melancholy
- Melancholy and institutionalization in Skating the Edge
- Melancholy desire in Touching Earth Lightly
- The pursuit of happiness as the pursuit of adulthood in Skating the Edge
- Achieving adulthood through queer disavowal in Touching Earth Lightly
- Conclusion
Notes References
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