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11 - Adapting children's literature

from Part Three - Genre, Industry, Taste

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2007

Deborah Cartmell
Affiliation:
De Montfort University, Leicester
Imelda Whelehan
Affiliation:
De Montfort University, Leicester
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Summary

Inserted in Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964) is a “paragone,” a poetic diatribe proclaiming the inestimable superiority of literature over television and the latter's responsibility for the present intellectual degeneration of the child in which Dahl's own voice can be heard loudly and clearly:

HIS BRAIN BECOMES AS SOFT AS CHEESE HIS POWERS OF THINKING RUST AND FREEZE! HE CANNOT THINK - HE ONLY SEES!

The “paragone,” the defense of the superior claims of one discipline over another, especially in terms of the visual and the verbal, has an extensive literature, from Plato to Sir Philip Sidney, and reappears in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries in the often competing and strained relationship between literature and film, and the covert paragone detectable in both forms. The most famous of all paragones, Ben Jonson's “Expostulation,” an attack on his all too successful collaborator, the architect, Inigo Jones, is unnervingly prophetic of the current “he's only the author” syndrome (of Hollywood, where spectacle undeniably rules):

O shows! Shows! Mighty shows! The eloquence of masques! What need of prose, Or verse, or sense, to express immortal you?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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