Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature

Child trafficking is one of the most prevalent themes in literature, including novels for young adult literature. Despite its prominence as an often used theme in young adult literature, not much is known about what governs child trafficking, specifically in contemporary young adult literature. This...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan, Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton, Shapii, Aspalila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/21661/1/JTE%20%204%203%202015%20423%20433.pdf
_version_ 1825804600857329664
author Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan
Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton
Shapii, Aspalila
author_facet Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan
Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton
Shapii, Aspalila
author_sort Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan
collection UUM
description Child trafficking is one of the most prevalent themes in literature, including novels for young adult literature. Despite its prominence as an often used theme in young adult literature, not much is known about what governs child trafficking, specifically in contemporary young adult literature. This article seeks to identify an appropriate theory that could explain child trafficking in literary works. Five theories, in particular, the agency theory, Bales’ theory of modern slavery, Otherness, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's Subaltern, and Bronfenbrenner Ecological theory (1994) are discussed and compared to illustrate what has taken place in novels, particularly where child trafficking is concerned, for young adult readers. The paper concludes that while some of the theories could probably be employed to discuss the notion of child trafficking in general, they do not provide a profound analysis of the characters, themes, and plots in the novels for a young adult. Bronfenbrenner Ecological theory (1994) is viewed as the most suitable theory that lends better understanding in explaining child trafficking in literature because it concentrates on the victims, the close environment, and the national and international environment
first_indexed 2024-07-04T06:18:11Z
format Article
id uum-21661
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
language English
last_indexed 2024-07-04T06:18:11Z
publishDate 2016
record_format eprints
spelling uum-216612017-04-18T08:49:54Z https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/21661/ Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton Shapii, Aspalila PN Literature (General) Child trafficking is one of the most prevalent themes in literature, including novels for young adult literature. Despite its prominence as an often used theme in young adult literature, not much is known about what governs child trafficking, specifically in contemporary young adult literature. This article seeks to identify an appropriate theory that could explain child trafficking in literary works. Five theories, in particular, the agency theory, Bales’ theory of modern slavery, Otherness, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's Subaltern, and Bronfenbrenner Ecological theory (1994) are discussed and compared to illustrate what has taken place in novels, particularly where child trafficking is concerned, for young adult readers. The paper concludes that while some of the theories could probably be employed to discuss the notion of child trafficking in general, they do not provide a profound analysis of the characters, themes, and plots in the novels for a young adult. Bronfenbrenner Ecological theory (1994) is viewed as the most suitable theory that lends better understanding in explaining child trafficking in literature because it concentrates on the victims, the close environment, and the national and international environment 2016-10 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/21661/1/JTE%20%204%203%202015%20423%20433.pdf Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan and Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton and Shapii, Aspalila (2016) Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature. Arab World English Journal (AWEJ) (4S). p. 138. ISSN 2229-9327 http://www.awej.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1022:faisal-lafee-etan-alobeytha-sharifah-fazliyaton-binti-shaik-ismail-aspalila-bt-shapii&catid=69&Itemid=138
spellingShingle PN Literature (General)
Alobeytha, Faisal Lafee Etan
Shaik Ismail, Sharifah Fazliyaton
Shapii, Aspalila
Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title_full Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title_fullStr Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title_full_unstemmed Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title_short Theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature: a review of the literature
title_sort theorizing child trafficking in young adult literature a review of the literature
topic PN Literature (General)
url https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/21661/1/JTE%20%204%203%202015%20423%20433.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT alobeythafaisallafeeetan theorizingchildtraffickinginyoungadultliteratureareviewoftheliterature
AT shaikismailsharifahfazliyaton theorizingchildtraffickinginyoungadultliteratureareviewoftheliterature
AT shapiiaspalila theorizingchildtraffickinginyoungadultliteratureareviewoftheliterature