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2006-11-07 08:01:58 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

I need some scholar reviews on the subject

2006-11-07 08:23:16 · update #1

3 answers

E. B. White's Paean to Life: The Environmental Imagination of Charlotte's Web By: Wake, Lynn Overholt; pp. 101-14 IN: Dobrin, Sidney I. (ed. and introd.); Kidd, Kenneth B. (ed. and introd.); Wild Things: Children's Culture and Ecocriticism. Detroit, MI: Wayne State UP; 2004. ix, 308 pp. (book article)

Species Trouble: The Abjection of Adolescence in E. B. White's Stuart Little By: Gubar, Marah; Lion and the Unicorn: A Critical Journal of Children's Literature, 2003 Jan; 27 (1): 98-119. (journal article)

E. B. White and Charlotte's Web By: Elledge, Scott; American Educator, 2001 Spring; 25 (1): 38-46.

From Charlotte to the Outposts of Empire: Troping Adoption By: Clark, Beverly Lyon; pp. 97-109 IN: Novy, Marianne (ed. and introd.); Imagining Adoption: Essays on Literature and Culture. Ann Arbor, MI: U of Michigan P; 2001. viii, 316 pp. (book article)

Lacan with Runt Pigs By: Coats, Karen; Children's Literature: Annual of The Modern Language Association Division on Children's Literature and The Children's Literature Association, 1999; 27: 105-28. (journal article)

Beneath the Web and over the Stream: The Search for Safe Places in Charlotte's Web and Bridge to Terabitha By: Misheff, Sue; Children's Literature in Education, 1998 Sept; 29 (3): 131-41. (journal article)

Charlotte, Arachnida: The Scientific Sources By: Neumeyer, Peter F.; The Lion and the Unicorn: A Critical Journal of Children's Literature, 1995 Dec; 19 (2): 223-31. (journal article)

What Makes a Good Children's Book? The Texture of Charlotte's Web By: Neumeyer, Peter; pp. 69-77 IN: Root, Robert L., Jr. (ed.); Critical Essays on E. B. White. New York: G. K. Hall; 1994. xiii, 205 pp. (book article)

Writing in Charlotte's Web By: Alberghene, Janice M.; pp. 78-87 IN: Root, Robert L., Jr. (ed.); Critical Essays on E. B. White. New York: G. K. Hall; 1994. xiii, 205 pp. (book article)

Magic in the Web: Time, Pigs, and E. B. White By: Solheim, Helene; pp. 144-57 IN: Root, Robert L., Jr. (ed.); Critical Essays on E. B. White. New York: G. K. Hall; 1994. xiii, 205 pp. (book article)

'The Miracle of the Web': Community, Desire, and Narrativity in Charlotte's Web By: Rushdy, Ashraf H. A.; The Lion and the Unicorn: A Critical Journal of Children's Literature, 1991 Dec; 15 (2): 35-60. (journal article)

Satire and the Evolution of Perspective in Children's Literature: Mark Twain, E. B. White, and Louise Fitzhugh By: Stahl, J. D.; Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 1990 Fall; 15 (3): 119-122. (journal article)

The Reproduction of Mothering in Charlotte's Web By: Rollin, Lucy; Children's Literature: Annual of The Modern Language Association Division on Children's Literature and The Children's Literature Association, 1990; 18: 42-52. (journal article)

The Real Miracle of Charlotte's Web By: Kinghorn, Norton D.; Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 1986 Spring; 11 (1): 4-9. (journal article)

E. B. White's Charlotte's Web: Caught in the Web By: Landes, Sonia; pp. 270-80 IN: Nodelman, Perry (ed.); May, Jill P. (fwd.); Touchstones: Reflections on the Best in Children's Literature, Volume One. West Lafayette: Children's Lit. Assoc.; 1985. vi, 309 pp. (book article)

Charlotte's Web: Flaws in the Weaving By: Apseloff, Marilyn; pp. 171-181 IN: Street, Douglas (ed.); Children's Novels and the Movies. New York: Ungar; 1983. xxiv, 304 pp. (book article)

Charlotte's Web: A Lonely Fantasy of Love By: Griffith, John; Children's Literature: An International Journal, Annual of the Modern Language Association Seminar on Children's Literature, 1979; 8: 111-17. (journal article)

Webs of Concern: The Little Prince and Charlotte's Web. By: Gagnon, Laurence; pp. 61-66 IN: Butler, Francelia; Children's Literature:The Great Excluded.. Storrs, Conn.: Children's Lit. Assn; 1973. 256 pp. (book article)

2006-11-07 09:49:50 · answer #1 · answered by laney_po 6 · 0 0

Well here's a short paragraph i found online that may help push you towards one of the many directions you could take:
"E.B. White's Charlotte's Web serves as an environmental parable for our time. As we reflect on our relationship with nature, we might consider the three ways in which Wilbur the pig was valued in White's story. His instrumental value cashes out in ham hocks and sausage. His aesthetic value earns him a ribbon at the county fair. His moral value is the value he has in and of himself, and Charlotte the spider loves him for it. We can value nature the way Charlotte valued Wilbur, or we can, as the farmer Zuckerman did at first, see the natural world only in terms of the pork chops it provides."
:o)

2006-11-07 08:19:50 · answer #2 · answered by I Ain't Your Momma 5 · 0 0

Check Spartk Notes on line.

2006-11-07 08:08:07 · answer #3 · answered by Ashley B 1 · 0 0

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