An analysis of class-as-race and gender ideology in the US young adult sports novel "Racing Savannah" (2013).

  1. Riestra-Camacho, Rocío 1
  1. 1 Universidad de Oviedo
    info

    Universidad de Oviedo

    Oviedo, España

    ROR https://ror.org/006gksa02

Zeitschrift:
IJES: international journal of English studies

ISSN: 1578-7044 1989-6131

Datum der Publikation: 2020

Titel der Ausgabe: Open Issue

Ausgabe: 20

Nummer: 3

Seiten: 129-144

Art: Artikel

DOI: 10.6018/IJES.402031 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen Access editor

Andere Publikationen in: IJES: international journal of English studies

Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung

Zusammenfassung

Equine fiction is an established genre in the English juvenile literary canon. Current works in the field appeal to adolescent readers thanks to their interface between classic motifs of vintage and contemporary forms of equine narratives. Performing a close reading of selected passages in Miranda Kenneally’s Racing Savannah (2013), this paper acknowledges how this novel is a revitalization and a challenge to this pattern. Savannah, who is more gifted than her companions, is subordinate to the decisions of the junior of the household where she works. Jack Goodwin, the protagonist’s romantic lead, educated in a neocolonialist background of male jockeying, becomes Savannah’s marker of difference according to her sex and lower socioeconomic status, which lay at the root of her later racialization despite her being a white character. My analysis attempts to expose how these difficulties encountered by the protagonist to become a professional jockey articulate past and present constraints of the horse-racing ladder.

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