Children's Literature: A History, Spring 2021 Dashboard
Description
An exploration of children’s literature as it evolved over the seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries. The course will examine the relationship between ideologies of childhood and literature for children and young adults. Students will learn how to evaluate and interpret a children’s text and its accompanying illustrations. Attention will be given to the socio-political context of each work, the rise of gender-specific fiction, and the ways children’s literature and young adult fiction in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have responded to child development, race, religion, and alternative parenting and sexuality. Students will help to shape the curriculum by proposing a children’s book to be added to the syllabus, voting on these selections, and leading class discussion. Our class exhibition will focus on the history of children’s literature. We will collectively decide on an approach to the exhibit. Each student will design a virtual “case” of 3-5 images and write headers and captions as well as an introduction.
Galleries, Timelines, and Maps
"Drink Me," by John Tenniel for Lewis Carroll's Alice (1865), colorized for The Nursery Alice (1890)
The nineteenth century witnessed a gradual shift in ideologies of childhood--from sin to innocence. The doctrine of sin dates to Eve’s eating of the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden in Genesis. This view--dominant in the literature given to children in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries--aims to cleanse sinners of innate wickedness. Didactic texts, often called “awful example” stories, teach Christian virtues and contain tales of children making mistakes and facing consequences,... more