Following the material turn in the humanities, this book brings
perspectives from science and ecology into dialogue with children's
fiction written and published in the UK and the USA in the 21st
century. It develops the concept of entanglement, which originated in
20th-century quantum physics but has been applied to cultural critique,
through a reading of Fantastika literature. Surveying a wide-raging
scope of literary texts, this book covers the gothic, fantasy, the
Weird, and other forms of speculative fiction to argue that Fantastika
positions entanglement as an ethical imperative that transforms our
imaginative relationship with materiality. In so doing, it synthesizes
perspectives from a similarly diverse range of areas, including ecology,
physics, anthropology, and literary studies, to examine the storied
matter of children's Fantastika as ground from which we might begin to
imagine an as-yet-unrealised future that addresses the problems of our
present.