Exploring the ethical questions posed by, in, and about children’s literature, this collection examines the way texts intended for children raise questions of value, depict the moral development of their characters, and call into attention shared moral presuppositions. The essays in Part I look at various past attempts at conveying moral messages to children and interrogate their underlying assumptions. What visions of childhood were conveyed by explicit attempts to cultivate specific virtues in children? What unstated cultural assumptions were expressed by growing resistance to didacticism? How should we prepare children to respond to racism in their books and in their society? Part II takes up the ethical orientations of various classic and contemporary texts, including 'prosaic ethics' in the Hundred Acre Wood, moral discernment in Narnia, ethical recognition in the distant worlds traversed by L’Engle, and virtuous transgression in recent Anglo-American children’s literature and in the emerging children’s literature of 1960s Taiwan. Part III’s essays engage in ethical criticism of arguably problematic messages about our relationship to nonhuman animals, about war, and about prejudice. The final section considers how we respond to children’s literature with ethically focused essays exploring a range of ways in which child readers and adult authorities react to children’s literature. Even as children’s literature has evolved in opposition to its origins in didactic Sunday school tracts and moralizing fables, authors, parents, librarians, and scholars remain sensitive to the values conveyed to children through the texts they choose to share with them.
Ethics and Children's Literature
... Elidor (1965) and The Owl Service (1967) by Alan Garner; Vivien Alcock's The Stonewalkers (1981); Jan Needle's A Game of Soldiers (1985); Humbug (1992) by Nina Bawden; The Stones are Hatching (1999) by The poetry of evil.
For example, the poetic works of Shel Silverstein (1930-1999) may bear more than one interpretations: the first introduces simple and funny messages to children, whereas the second implies political and fragmented ideas through using word ...
Shows how children's literature can be used to help children develop their own strength as independent ethical decision makers.
A collection of 26 fun, simple and original stories, each centering on a different positive value, for parents to read to their children.
"This book seeks to join the ongoing, interdisciplinary approach to children's literature by means of sustained readings of individual texts by means of important works in the history of philosophy.
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“The Long and the Short of Oliver and Alice: The Changing Size of the Victorian Child”. Dickens Studies Annual 29 (2000): 83–98. ... The Alice Books and the Contested Ground of the Natural World. Vol. 20. New York: Routledge, 2017.
Discusses the use of children's and adolescent literature in the classroom for helping to develop moral behavior in students.
New Perspectives on Young Children's Moral Education explores how to approach young children's moral education in a world of uncertainty and change.