This book focuses on girls and girlhoods, texts for and about
girls, and the cultural contexts that shape girls' experience. It
brings together scholars from girls' studies and children's
literature, fields that have traditionally conducted their research
separately, and the collaboration showcases the breadth and
complexity of girl-related studies.
Contributors from disciplines such as sociology, literature,
education, and gender studies combine these disciplinary approaches
in novel ways with insights from international studies,
postcolonial studies, game studies, and other fields. Several of
the authors engage in activist and policy-development work around
girls who experience poverty and marginalization. Each essay is
concerned in one way or another with the politics of girlhood as
they manifest in national and cultural contexts, in the everyday
practices of girls, and in textual ideologies and agendas.
In contemporary Western societies girls and girlhood function
to some degree as markers of cultural reproduction and change. The
essays in this book proceed from the assumption that girls are
active participants in the production of texts and cultural forms;
they offer accounts of the diversity of girls' experience and
complex significances of texts by, for, and about girls.
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