Childhood And Childrens Books In Early Modern Europe 1550 1800
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Author | : Andrea Immel |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 350 |
Release | : 2013-11-05 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1135473323 |
This volume of 14 original essays by historians and literary scholars explores childhood and children's books in Early Modern Europe, 1550-1800. The collection aims to reposition childhood as a compelling presence in early modern imagination--a ready emblem of innocence, mischief, and playfulness. The essays offer a wide-ranging basis for reconceptualizing the development of a separate literature for children as central to evolving early modern concepts of human development and socialization. Among the topics covered are constructs of literacy as revealed by the figure of Goody Two Shoes, notions of pedagogy and academic standards, a reception study of children's reading based on book purchases made by Rugby school boys in the late eighteenth-century, an analysis of the first international best-seller for children, the abbe Pluche's Spectacle de la nature, and the commodification of child performers in Jacobean comedies.
Author | : Andrew O'Malley |
Publisher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 320 |
Release | : 2018-12-29 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 3319947370 |
The essays in this volume offer fresh and innovative considerations both of how children interacted with the world of print, and of how childhood circulated in the literary cultures of the eighteenth century. They engage with not only the texts produced for the period’s newly established children’s book market, but also with the figure of the child as it was employed for a variety of purposes in literatures for adult readers. Embracing a wide range of methodological and disciplinary perspectives and considering a variety of contexts, these essays explore childhood as a trope that gained increasing cultural significance in the period, while also recognizing children as active agents in the worlds of familial and social interaction. Together, they demonstrate the varied experiences of the eighteenth-century child alongside the shifting, sometimes competing, meanings that attached themselves to childhood during a period in which it became the subject of intensified interest in literary culture.
Author | : Lissa Paul |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 235 |
Release | : 2010-12-14 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1136841970 |
By focusing on the children’s book business of the long eighteenth-century, this book argues that the thinking, knowing children of the Enlightenment are models for the technologically-connected, socially-conscious children of the twenty-first. The increasingly obsolete images of Romantic innocent and ignorant children are bracketed between the two periods.
Author | : Roze Hentschell |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 289 |
Release | : 2020 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0198848811 |
This book is a cultural study of St Paul's Cathedral, its immediate surroundings, and the people who inhabited it prior to the 1666 fire of London.
Author | : Michelle Superle |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 207 |
Release | : 2011-05-09 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1136720871 |
Concurrent with increasing scholarly attention toward national children’s literatures, Contemporary English-language Indian Children’s Literature explores an emerging body of work that has thus far garnered little serious critical attention. Superle critically examines the ways Indian children’s writers have represented childhood in relation to the Indian nation, Indian cultural identity, and Indian girlhood. From a framework of postcolonial and feminist theories, children’s novels published between 1988 and 2008 in India are compared with those from the United Kingdom and North America from the same period, considering the differing ideologies and the current textual constructions of childhood at play in each. Broadly, Superle contends that over the past twenty years an aspirational view of childhood has developed in this literature—a view that positions children as powerful participants in the project of enabling positive social transformation. Her main argument, formed after recognizing several overarching thematic and structural patterns in more than one hundred texts, is that the novels comprise an aspirational literature with a transformative agenda: they imagine apparently empowered child characters who perform in diverse ways in the process of successfully creating and shaping the ideal Indian nation, their own well-adjusted bicultural identities in the diaspora, and/or their own empowered girlhoods. Michelle Superle is a Professor in the department of Communications at Okanagan College. She has taught children’s literature, composition, and creative writing courses at various Canadian universities and has published articles in Papers and IRCL.
Author | : Teresa Michals |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 289 |
Release | : 2014-03-06 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1107048540 |
This book explores how ideas about age changed for novels and their readers during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Author | : Gillian Lathey |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 258 |
Release | : 2010-09-13 |
Genre | : Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | : 1136925759 |
This book offers a historical analysis of key classical translated works for children, such as writings by Hans Christian Andersen and Grimms’ tales. Translations dominate the earliest history of texts written for children in English, and stories translated from other languages have continued to shape its course to the present day. Lathey traces the role of the translator and the impact of translations on the history of English-language children’s literature from the ninth century onwards. Discussions of popular texts in each era reveal fluctuations in the reception of translated children’s texts, as well as instances of cultural mediation by translators and editors. Abridgement, adaptation, and alteration by translators have often been viewed in a negative light, yet a closer examination of historical translators’ prefaces reveals a far more varied picture than that of faceless conduits or wilful censors. From William Caxton’s dedication of his translated History of Jason to young Prince Edward in 1477 (‘to thentent/he may begynne to lerne read Englissh’), to Edgar Taylor’s justification of the first translation into English of Grimms’ tales as a means of promoting children’s imaginations in an age of reason, translators have recorded in prefaces and other writings their didactic, religious, aesthetic, financial, and even political purposes for translating children’s texts.
Author | : Christine Wilkie-Stibbs |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 215 |
Release | : 2008-03-25 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1135867119 |
Christine Wilkie-Stibbs juxtaposes the narratives of literary and actual "outsider" children to explore how Western culture has imagined, defined, and dealt with various marginalized children, whether orphans, homeless, refugees, or victims of abuse.
Author | : Nicholas Orme |
Publisher | : Yale University Press |
Total Pages | : 280 |
Release | : 2023-02-28 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0300271689 |
The first history of childhood in Tudor England What was it like to grow up in England under the Tudors? How were children cared for, what did they play with, and what dangers did they face? In this beautifully illustrated and characteristically lively account, leading historian Nicholas Orme provides a rich survey of childhood in the period. Beginning with birth and infancy, he explores all aspects of children’s experiences, including the games they played, such as Blind Man’s Bluff and Mumble-the-Peg, and the songs they sang, such as “Three Blind Mice” and “Jack Boy, Ho Boy.” He shows how social status determined everything from the food children ate and the clothes they wore to the education they received and the work they undertook. Although childhood and adolescence could be challenging and even hazardous, it was also, as Nicholas Orme shows, a treasured time of learning and development. By looking at the lives of Tudor children we can gain a richer understanding of the era as a whole.
Author | : M. O. Grenby |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 325 |
Release | : 2009-12-10 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 052186819X |
A wide-ranging introduction to an exciting and rapidly expanding field.