Jacqueline Rose: P.3
- She
argues that children's literature has nothing much to do with real children and
their reading experience, but everything to do with how adults view childhood.
P.12
- The purposes of studying children's literature relates to cultural, educational, social and personal development.
- The purposes of studying children's literature relates to cultural, educational, social and personal development.
- The
role of adults in children's literature examined in terms of motivation and
ideology.
P.13
Children's literature is an oxymoron?
**Some for children, some about children.
**Instruction
vs. delight
**Adult vs. child
((Is childhood innocent?))
Judy Blume:
No kid
wants to stay a kid. The fantasy of childhood is to be an adult. Children are
inexperienced, but they are not innocent. Childhood can be a terrible time of
life. It is only adults who have forgotten who say "if only I could be a
kid again".
P.14
**The relationship between children's book and childhood is far from simple.
**The relationship between children's book and childhood is far from simple.
**Fiction is fiction, and children's book say a great deal to
adults about the relationships of adults to childhood, or about the concept of childhood
at particular period, rather than portraying actual childhoods.
** Children's
literature isabout power struggle. Adults write, children read. Adult are
exercising power. Children's books are adopting some implicit attitudes.
Jacqueline Rose:
((What is
lurking behind the apparently innocent children's book is in fact something
very intrusive, controlling, and often downright sinister.))
- Children's books are written by adults who have an agenda.
Even those writers who claim to be nothing but entertainers have their own
ideological stance, their own ideas of what is right and wrong, their own way
of seeing the world.
P.15
**Children's books are not innocent or simple, involving ourselves with children's literature means involving ourselves in a complex, active literary social system.
**Dealing with children's literature involves responsibility,
because what may at first sight seem like trivial or ephemeral texts are in
fact immensely powerful.
P.19
**There are a crossover books between children and adults.
**Some books are in fact books aimed at two audiences.
P.20
**There are a crossover books between children and adults.
**Some books are in fact books aimed at two audiences.
P.20
-Most
histories of children's literature suggest that children's book were initially
entirely designed for educational purposes, with 'delight'.
-In the course of the nineteenth century, instruction gave way
to entertainment, religion to fantasy – with Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
seen as a kind of anarchic, liberating turning point.
P.23
Childhoods is generally defied either by physical and mental characteristics – size, development or immaturity, it has been commonly associated with lack of responsibility.
Childhoods is generally defied either by physical and mental characteristics – size, development or immaturity, it has been commonly associated with lack of responsibility.
P.24
What we think of as a suitable for children is a part of complex social values.
_______________________________
نقاط مهمة في الاسبوع الاول ستدي قايد
·
Hunt argues that Children Literature is deeply concerned with issues of
power and politics, and that adults impose their own particular ideologies on
children.
·
One
of the reasons why certain books are considered unsuitable for children is that
they challenge particular ideologies; especially that Childhood is an
apolitical and asexual time of life that must be protected by adults.
·
All
Children Literature is ideological and based on implicit or explicit attitudes,
assumptions and world views.
·
Ideology
is also closely related to ideas about power. The adult-child relationship is
almost inevitably an unequal one, and in terms of literature, adults produce,
write and buy books for children.
·
The
question of whether literature should entertain or instruct is an ideological
one, as is the question of what children should learn through literature.