In point of fact, a few of them haven't been English orphans - Anne Shirley is Canadian, Dorothy Gale is from Kansas, Pippi, Hugo. But that's splitting hairs, I think. What's with all the orphans in children's literature?
Here's a few of the books I'm thinking of:
- Anne of Green Gables
- Ballet Shoes
- Harry Potter
- James and the Giant Peach
- Mistress Masham's Repose
- Pippi Longstocking
- The Invention of Hugo Cabret
- The Secret Garden
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
- The Wolves of Willoughby Chase
What's it all about? No parents to guide you mean you need to find your way in the world much earlier. Get rid of the parents and the powerless-ness of the child is catapulted into high relief. Grow up kids, parents just get in the way. It's kind of a sad message, but yet, these are some of my favorite books. The spunky children in The Wolves of Willoughby Chase and The Secret Garden are fabulous. Pippi Longstocking is the embodiment of question authority. The orphans triumph over adversity, letting the little children tucked into mama's arms see that life is not so bad, and it'll be easier with parents in the background.
Can you think of some more English orphans?
Were the Boxcar Children orphans? I think they weren't English anyway.
ReplyDeleteI remember from childhood pretend games: you always have to get rid of the parents first! Otherwise it would be a game about brushing our teeth and going to bed on time. LAME.
Even Frodo was an orphan.
ReplyDeleteThe children who lived in a barn (I think the parents aren't dead, and eventually come back, but they are certainly gone for a while.)
ReplyDeleteThief Lord, Inkheart, Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, Lemony Snicket stories, -- really, it's more common to be an orphan than not. Mysterious Benedict Society.
ReplyDeleteLyra in His Dark Materials. And then there are the functional orphans -- kids sent away from their parents to go to school or take a vacation or escape the Blitz. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Charlotte Sometimes. What Katy Did at School, too, but that one's American. And a bunch of the Susan Cooper books (also American). It's all about autonomy.
ReplyDeleteWeren't those creepy Flowers in the Attic kids orphans?My kids kind-of look like the twins on the back cover. Creeps me out.
ReplyDeleteStewart Little twice over, and really, the pig (Wilbur?) in Charlotte's web, again, twice over -- his real parents and then Charlotte.
ReplyDeleteIn Jane Austen's Emma, Emma is motherless; Frank Churchill is motherless & "give up" to his aunt; and Jane Fairfax is an orphan raised by work friends of her father.
ReplyDeleteThere's also Burnett's A Little Princess. And Huck Finn. And Jane Eyre.
Oh I am such a fan of "English orphan" tales. All the best childhood strife and adventure happens to orphans. I always assumed that in order to really live you had to get those pesky parents out of the way!
ReplyDeleteSometimes it's one dead parent and the other parent off at work all day. That's the story in Edward Eager's Half Magic and the new Jeanne Birdsall Penderwicks series.
ReplyDeleteEager was influenced by E. Nesbit, who supported her children as a single mother by writing stories all day, giving them ample opportunity for adventure...
The Melendy kids in the Elizabeth Enright books. Their mother was dead, and the father off working somewhere.
ReplyDeletePretty much all of the "Shoes" books.
James from James and the Giant Peach. Matilda is functionally an orphan, though she lives with her parents.
ReplyDeleteI read a wonderful intro to The Secret Garden about this, which talked about how though Mary's parents die horribly in the first chapter, and you'd think it would traumatize kids when they read it, her parents are so awful and she herself is so awful, that it's more "serves them right!" then "How sad!"
Ah, I see that you had James. I elided over it when reading the list.
ReplyDeleteI love that first paragraph in which his parents are killed.
You see it in all the Fairy Tales, too. Even the best of it, like Beauty & the Beast, it's a dead parent and one who checks out. If they didn't, though, then the kids wouldn't be in a position to stand up and make their own decisions - good and bad! As much as it might seem like parent-focused aggression it's just a literary device and helps kids think about how to make decisions on their own...now if only there were some other category of fiction that taught parents the best ways to step back enough (without dying!) for kids to learn to make their own decisions.
ReplyDeleteEva Ibbotson's The Secret of Platform 13 (she was born in Austria, not England, but still....). Bambi. Cinderella.
ReplyDeleteWe love The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place. Orphans who were raised by wolves are awesome!
ReplyDeleteDaddy Long Legs. A great read.
ReplyDeleteDid Christopher Robin have parents? You know, it seems like even if characters have parents, they're often not in the story. I guess child protagonists can get up to a lot more adventure without parents in the way.
ReplyDeleteHm...add The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe...
nancy drew (mother dead; father away). dr. doolittle's tribe (cognizant animals). robinson crusoe. entire rafts of disney stories. every adventure story ever told is about losing one's usual support system, and finding a way to get along anyhow.
ReplyDeletei loved those kinds of stories, too. spent ever so many nights and years imagining how i could get by if i somehow ended up in the wilderness, or whatever.
i'm not sure the message is so much "parents get in the way" as "start building your tools, because sometimes things happen."
a bit above the girlie's age level, but lord of the flies is the counterpoint: everything going to hell without rules. all the kid-level books assume there is good out there, and the trick is finding it; the rules that matter are still there. (well, mostly.)
ReplyDeleteMy youngest and I had a similar routine about how mothers always die, or are already dead, in Disney movies. So I'd suggest a movie and she'd ask with a big grin, "Does the mother die IN the movie, or before?"
ReplyDelete