Informed by the framework of Halliday's Systemic Functional Grammar, this paper compares "The Little Mermaid" (1872) by Hans Christian Andersen and its parodic version "The Little Mer-persun" (1995) by James ...Informed by the framework of Halliday's Systemic Functional Grammar, this paper compares "The Little Mermaid" (1872) by Hans Christian Andersen and its parodic version "The Little Mer-persun" (1995) by James Finn Garner. Andersen's story creates gender stereotype by under-representing the heroine as an effectual Actor and Sayer but establishing the image of the hero as a powerful Actor and assertive Sayer. Garner's story, on the other hand, tends to subvert the traditional gender stereotype by representing the heroine as a more dynamic Actor and Sayer than the hero and by reversing the power relationship between the two. These differing characterizations reflect the two competing literary traditions and embedded ideologies of romanticist fairy tale genre and modem "politically-correct" parodic satire展开更多
文摘Informed by the framework of Halliday's Systemic Functional Grammar, this paper compares "The Little Mermaid" (1872) by Hans Christian Andersen and its parodic version "The Little Mer-persun" (1995) by James Finn Garner. Andersen's story creates gender stereotype by under-representing the heroine as an effectual Actor and Sayer but establishing the image of the hero as a powerful Actor and assertive Sayer. Garner's story, on the other hand, tends to subvert the traditional gender stereotype by representing the heroine as a more dynamic Actor and Sayer than the hero and by reversing the power relationship between the two. These differing characterizations reflect the two competing literary traditions and embedded ideologies of romanticist fairy tale genre and modem "politically-correct" parodic satire