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A rose is a rose is a rose: even in YA SFF

Freestone, Pete

Authors

Pete Freestone



Abstract

The rose has been valued, revered, and infused with meaning across time and cultures—from the earliest chemists to appear in the historical record to today's mass-market perfumes, from the religious festivals of ancient Rome to the works of the Romantic poets. This is also the case in 21st century YA science fiction and fantasy, where roses have featured as both motif and symbols of romance, power, class, and religion. This paper takes a critical plant studies approach to tracing some key examples, from President Snow’s roses in Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games series, to the juxtaposition of famine and flowers in Diana Pinguicha’s A Curse of Roses. It will examine how the rose as a concept draws on the flower’s place in popular consciousness to provoke recognition and emotion in readers, often acting as a bridge between distant, imagined worlds and our own.

Citation

Freestone, P. (2021, December). A rose is a rose is a rose: even in YA SFF. Paper presented at Concepts in Popular Genre Fiction Symposium, Deakin University / Online

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name Concepts in Popular Genre Fiction Symposium
Conference Location Deakin University / Online
Start Date Dec 6, 2021
End Date Dec 8, 2021
Deposit Date Nov 3, 2021
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2818889