The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA

Young adult novels are full of ordinary things and everyday actions, and these “reality effects”, to use Roland Barthes’ term, can help to build the meaningful connective tissue against which textual adolescents exist. This article examines contemporary British realist YA in order to understand the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alison Waller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Fincham Press 2020-11-01
Series:International Journal of Young Adult Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijyal.ac.uk/articles/10.24877/ijyal.34
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author Alison Waller
author_facet Alison Waller
author_sort Alison Waller
collection DOAJ
description Young adult novels are full of ordinary things and everyday actions, and these “reality effects”, to use Roland Barthes’ term, can help to build the meaningful connective tissue against which textual adolescents exist. This article examines contemporary British realist YA in order to understand the cultural work it does in creating ordinary worlds its readers can recognise. It shows how narratives produce a shared backdrop of lived experience that can nonetheless reveal certain socio-economic and ethnic differences. Paying attention to the mundane and routine is also posited as a method for locating YA fiction within a much broader literary and cultural context than usual. Existing YA scholarship has tended to focus on ontological questions about extraordinary fictional teenagers and how they are constructed according to universal frameworks of ‘normal’. This article instead demonstrates how textual teenagers are also situated by the common realities of everyday life in ways that need to be understood as specifically inflected by national conditions. It examines two tropes of ‘ordinariness’ – cups of tea and bus journeys – in a range of British YA standalone novels from the last decade, including work by Holly Bourne, Ally Kennen, Muhammad Khan, Patrice Lawrence, Nikesh Shukla, and Lisa Williamson. In doing so, it unpacks the rich cultural meanings and functions that are at play via these apparently non-symbolic textual features, and argues that, although tea and buses often act as reassuring markers of the ordinary, in some cases they represent a narrative mode that can actually question the status quo.
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spelling doaj.art-915c1f2b6fb8461f89464d241f358cc22023-12-02T18:10:29ZengFincham PressInternational Journal of Young Adult Literature2634-52772020-11-011112510.24877/ijyal.34The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YAAlison WallerYoung adult novels are full of ordinary things and everyday actions, and these “reality effects”, to use Roland Barthes’ term, can help to build the meaningful connective tissue against which textual adolescents exist. This article examines contemporary British realist YA in order to understand the cultural work it does in creating ordinary worlds its readers can recognise. It shows how narratives produce a shared backdrop of lived experience that can nonetheless reveal certain socio-economic and ethnic differences. Paying attention to the mundane and routine is also posited as a method for locating YA fiction within a much broader literary and cultural context than usual. Existing YA scholarship has tended to focus on ontological questions about extraordinary fictional teenagers and how they are constructed according to universal frameworks of ‘normal’. This article instead demonstrates how textual teenagers are also situated by the common realities of everyday life in ways that need to be understood as specifically inflected by national conditions. It examines two tropes of ‘ordinariness’ – cups of tea and bus journeys – in a range of British YA standalone novels from the last decade, including work by Holly Bourne, Ally Kennen, Muhammad Khan, Patrice Lawrence, Nikesh Shukla, and Lisa Williamson. In doing so, it unpacks the rich cultural meanings and functions that are at play via these apparently non-symbolic textual features, and argues that, although tea and buses often act as reassuring markers of the ordinary, in some cases they represent a narrative mode that can actually question the status quo.https://ijyal.ac.uk/articles/10.24877/ijyal.34british ya literatureordinarinessrealist ya
spellingShingle Alison Waller
The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
International Journal of Young Adult Literature
british ya literature
ordinariness
realist ya
title The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
title_full The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
title_fullStr The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
title_full_unstemmed The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
title_short The Art of Being Ordinary: Cups of Tea and Catching the Bus in Contemporary British YA
title_sort art of being ordinary cups of tea and catching the bus in contemporary british ya
topic british ya literature
ordinariness
realist ya
url https://ijyal.ac.uk/articles/10.24877/ijyal.34
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