Recent scholarship on children s literature displays a wide
variety of interests in classic and contemporary children s books.
While environmental and ecological concerns have led to an interest
in ecocriticism, as yet there is little on the significance of the
ecological imagination and experience to both the authors and
readers young and old of these texts. This edited collection brings
together a set of original international research-based chapters to
explore the role of children s literature in learning about
environments and places, with a focus on how children s literature
may inform and enrich our imagination, experiences and responses to
environmental challenges and injustice. Contributions from
Australia, Canada, USA and UK explore the diverse ways in which
children s literature can provide what are arguably some of the
first and possibly most formative engagements that some children
might have with nature . Chapters examine classic and new
storybooks, mythic tales, and image-based and/or written texts read
at home, in school and in the field. Contributors focus on
exploring how children s literature mediates and informs our
imagination and understandings of diverse environments and places,
and how it might open our eyes and lives to other presences,
understandings and priorities through stories, their telling and
re-telling, and their analysis.
This book was originally published as a special issue of
Environmental Education Research."
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