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Focusing on significant and cutting-edge preoccupations within
children’s literature scholarship, The Routledge Companion to
Children’s Literature and Culture presents a comprehensive
overview of the print, digital, and electronic texts for children
aged zero to thirteen as forms of world literature participating in
a panoply of identity formations. Offering five distinct sections,
this volume will: • Familiarize students and beginning scholars
with key concepts and main methodological resources guiding
contemporary inquiry into children’s literature. • Describe the
major media formats and genres for texts expressly addressing
children. • Consider the production, distribution, and valuing of
children’s books from an assortment of historical and
contemporary perspectives, highlighting context as a driver of
content. • Map how children’s texts have historically presumed
and prescribed certain identities on the part of their readers,
sometimes addressing readers who share some part of the author’s
identity, sometimes seeking to educate the reader about a presumed
“other,” and in recent decades increasingly foregrounding
identities once lacking visibility and voice. • Explore the
historical evolutions and trans-regional contacts and
(inter)connections in the long process of the formation of global
children’s literature, highlighting new issues such as
retranslation, transnationalism, transculturality, and new digital
formats for considering cultural crossings and renegotiations in
the production of children’s literature. Methodically presented
and contextualized, this volume is an engaging introduction to this
expanding and multifaceted field.
Taking up the understudied relationship between the cultural
history of childhood and media studies, this volume traces
twentieth-century migrations of the child-savage analogy from
colonial into postcolonial discourse across a wide range of old and
new media. Older and newer media such as films, textbooks,
children's literature, periodicals, comic strips, children's radio,
and toys are deeply implicated in each other through ongoing
'remediation', meaning that they continually mimic, absorb and
transform each other's representational formats, stylistic
features, and content. Media theory thus confronts the cultural
history of childhood with the challenge of re-thinking change in
childhood imaginaries as transformation-through-repetition
patterns, rather than as rise-shine-decline sequences. This volume
takes up this challenge, demonstrating that one historical epoch
may well accommodate diverging childhood repertoires, which are
recycled again and again as they are played out across a whole
gamut of different media formats in the course of time.
Taking up the understudied relationship between the cultural
history of childhood and media studies, this volume traces
twentieth-century migrations of the child-savage analogy from
colonial into postcolonial discourse across a wide range of old and
new media. Older and newer media such as films, textbooks,
children's literature, periodicals, comic strips, children's radio,
and toys are deeply implicated in each other through ongoing
'remediation', meaning that they continually mimic, absorb and
transform each other's representational formats, stylistic
features, and content. Media theory thus confronts the cultural
history of childhood with the challenge of re-thinking change in
childhood imaginaries as transformation-through-repetition
patterns, rather than as rise-shine-decline sequences. This volume
takes up this challenge, demonstrating that one historical epoch
may well accommodate diverging childhood repertoires, which are
recycled again and again as they are played out across a whole
gamut of different media formats in the course of time.
While Romantic-era concepts of childhood nostalgia have been
understood as the desire to retrieve the ephemeral mindset of the
child, this collection proposes that the emergence of digital media
has altered this reflective gesture towards the past. No longer is
childhood nostalgia reliant on individual memory. Rather, it is
associated through contemporary convergence culture with the
commodities of one's youth as they are recycled from one media
platform to another. Essays in the volume's first section identify
recurrent patterns in the recycling, adaptation, and remediation of
children's toys and media, providing context for section two's
exploration of childhood nostalgia in memorial practices. In these
essays, the contributors suggest that childhood toys and media play
a role in the construction of s the imagined communities (Benedict
Anderson) that define nations and nationalism. Eschewing the
dichotomy between restorative and reflexive nostalgia, the essays
in section three address the ethics of nostalgia in terms of child
agency and depictions of childhood. In a departure from the notion
that childhood nostalgia is the exclusive prerogative of narrative
fiction, section four looks for its traces in the child sciences.
Pushing against nostalgia's persistent associations with wishful
thinking, false memories, and distortion, this collection suggests
nostalgia is never categorically good or bad in itself, but owes
its benefits or defects to the ways in which it is brought to bear
on the representation of children and childhood.
While Romantic-era concepts of childhood nostalgia have been
understood as the desire to retrieve the ephemeral mindset of the
child, this collection proposes that the emergence of digital media
has altered this reflective gesture towards the past. No longer is
childhood nostalgia reliant on individual memory. Rather, it is
associated through contemporary convergence culture with the
commodities of one's youth as they are recycled from one media
platform to another. Essays in the volume's first section identify
recurrent patterns in the recycling, adaptation, and remediation of
children's toys and media, providing context for section two's
exploration of childhood nostalgia in memorial practices. In these
essays, the contributors suggest that childhood toys and media play
a role in the construction of s the imagined communities (Benedict
Anderson) that define nations and nationalism. Eschewing the
dichotomy between restorative and reflexive nostalgia, the essays
in section three address the ethics of nostalgia in terms of child
agency and depictions of childhood. In a departure from the notion
that childhood nostalgia is the exclusive prerogative of narrative
fiction, section four looks for its traces in the child sciences.
Pushing against nostalgia's persistent associations with wishful
thinking, false memories, and distortion, this collection suggests
nostalgia is never categorically good or bad in itself, but owes
its benefits or defects to the ways in which it is brought to bear
on the representation of children and childhood.
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