Collaboration and Connection Intergenerational Authorship in Al Rabeeah and Yeung's Homes: A Refugee Story
Juvenilia scholarship typically privileges a lone child author writing without adult intervention. This essay explores questions about intergenerational authorship and juvenilia through a focus on Homes: A Refugee Story, a work of “creative non-fiction” produced through the collaboration of Abu Bakr...
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Published in | Journal of juvenilia studies (Print) Vol. 4; no. 1 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
24.12.2021
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Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Juvenilia scholarship typically privileges a lone child author writing without adult intervention. This essay explores questions about intergenerational authorship and juvenilia through a focus on Homes: A Refugee Story, a work of “creative non-fiction” produced through the collaboration of Abu Bakr al Rabeeah and his former teacher Winnie Yeung. Homes chronicles the experience of al Rabeeah in Syria prior to his emigration with his family to Canada as a young teen. The essay authors draw on a joint interview they conducted with al Rabeeah and Yeung, who characterized their mode of collaborating as one between the young “storyteller” and adult “writer,” and discussed how they negotiated their roles in light of questions regarding agency, privacy, ethics, and trauma. The essay concludes by suggesting that fluid definitions of child writing and child agency may be particularly important when it comes to trauma narratives. |
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ISSN: | 2561-8318 2561-8326 |
DOI: | 10.29173/jjs74 |