Imagined Geography: Strange Places and People in Children’s Literature
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in: The Wenshan Review of Literature and Culture, Jahrgang 10, Nr. 2, 06.2017, S. 1-32.
Publikation: Beiträge in Zeitschriften › Zeitschriftenaufsätze › Forschung › begutachtet
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Imagined Geography
T2 - Strange Places and People in Children’s Literature
AU - O'Sullivan, Emer
PY - 2017/6
Y1 - 2017/6
N2 - Prior to the advent of electronic media, and before travelling became a mass phenomenon, books were the primary means through which children gained a picture of the world at large and gleaned information about far-away places and their inhabitants. The first works of fiction adapted for children, Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, inspired two major narrative traditions: adventure stories set in exotic places but told in a realistic mode, and fantastic journeys to invented realms. Systematic representations of foreigners in non-fiction for children start to appear in late 18th-century pictorial encyclopedias, and geography textbooks designed to instruct and amuse with descriptions of places and of the customs of their inhabitants, are popular from the early 19th century on. With an imagological focus on the construction of national and ethnic identities, and with special attention to cultural perspective, this article examines and contrasts representations of imaginary and purportedly real foreign people and places in children’s books, from late 18th- and early 19th-century educational and recreational material in which strange places and people are “discovered,” through late 19th- and early 20th-century abcedaria and picturebooks which presented these as “known,” to contemporary, ludic material which adopts a performative approach towards presenting strange places and people.
AB - Prior to the advent of electronic media, and before travelling became a mass phenomenon, books were the primary means through which children gained a picture of the world at large and gleaned information about far-away places and their inhabitants. The first works of fiction adapted for children, Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, inspired two major narrative traditions: adventure stories set in exotic places but told in a realistic mode, and fantastic journeys to invented realms. Systematic representations of foreigners in non-fiction for children start to appear in late 18th-century pictorial encyclopedias, and geography textbooks designed to instruct and amuse with descriptions of places and of the customs of their inhabitants, are popular from the early 19th century on. With an imagological focus on the construction of national and ethnic identities, and with special attention to cultural perspective, this article examines and contrasts representations of imaginary and purportedly real foreign people and places in children’s books, from late 18th- and early 19th-century educational and recreational material in which strange places and people are “discovered,” through late 19th- and early 20th-century abcedaria and picturebooks which presented these as “known,” to contemporary, ludic material which adopts a performative approach towards presenting strange places and people.
KW - English
KW - Image studies
KW - Children's literature studies
KW - Abcdedaria
KW - children's literature
KW - Cultural history
KW - Imagology
KW - Picturebooks
KW - Literature studies
KW - Imagologie
KW - Kinder- und Jugendliteraturwissenschaft
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85021710380&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 10
SP - 1
EP - 32
JO - The Wenshan Review of Literature and Culture
JF - The Wenshan Review of Literature and Culture
SN - 2077-1282
IS - 2
ER -