Title: Constructing Childhood: The History of Early Children
1Constructing Childhood The History of Early
Childrens Literature and the Place of Fairy Tales
- English 507
- Dr. Karen Roggenkamp
- Image Orbis Sensualium PictureFacsimile of 1672
English Edition
2What is childrens literature? What is
childhood?
- Meaning of childhood is ideologicalsocially
constructed, constantly evolving - Books for children reflect dominant cultural
ideals - Reinforce ideas about behavior, morality, gender
roles, class structure, etc.shape reader - Reflect ideological lens of writer, culturenot
created in vacuum - Image Rosemary Adcock, Orphan Series
3Analyze childrens literature in order to . . .
- Uncover cultures ideal views of childhood
- Examine societys concept of self
- Interrogate individual authors relationship to
broader cultural contexts - Viewed across time, provides insight into our own
concepts of childhood and normalcy -
- Image Arthur B. Houghton, Mother and
Children Reading, 1860
4What did childhood mean? Key shifts
- Augustinian paradigm (17th Century, Puritans)
Children innately corrupt, sinful animalistic
nature (self will) must be constrained spiritual
objectives instruction through punishment - Educationalist paradigm (18th century Locke)
Childrens minds offer a blank slate (tabula
rasa) on which to write neither good nor evil by
nature intellectual and moral objectives
instruction through logic and reason literature
to instruct and delight - Natural Educationalist paradigm (18th-19th
centuries Rouseau) Children innately pure,
wise childlikeness (self will) must be
developed and protected from corrupting social
institutions emotional and moral objectives
instruction through non-directive means - 40 years ago children need to read about harsh
realities of life
5Childrens Lit in Ancient World (roughly 50
BCE / BC - 500 CE / AD)
- Oral tales heard, not read
- Hybrid audiencechildren and adults alike
- Aesops Fablesanimal tales with pointed
moralsnot just for children - Guide/shape citizenry entertain
- Image John Ogilby, The Fables of Aesop, 1673-75
6Middle Ages(500 1500)
- Low literacyclass-based
- Childhood generally ignoredshort and not so
sweet - Little adultscf. portraiture
- Medieval epics, romances, histories for adults
also held childrens interest (e.g. Beowulf, King
Arthur, Robin Hood, lives of saints, historical
legends, etc.)
7Medieval Fables(500 1500)
- Mingle reality with magic, fantasy,
enchantment animal characters - Literature rich with childlike elements
(wonder, mystery, fantasy, etc.) - Gesta Romanorum (Deeds of the Romans), late 13th
century moral tales animal tales familiar
story plots for centuries to come (Boccaccio,
Chaucer, Shakespeare) - Image Early Manuscript, Gesta Romanorum
-
-
8European Renaissance(1500 1650)
- Printing Press (mid 15th century)
- Print books in quantityreduce time, labor, cost
- Increased literacy, promoted education,
disseminated knowledge and practice of reading - Eventually change nature of childhood, childrens
literature, and fairy tales - Image Replica of early Gutenberg press
9Bad Boys and Girls Protestantism, 17th-century
Puritans, Roots of Modern Childhood
- Ideal of universal literacy
- Children products of original sin prepare for
adult religious experience - Instructional books, conduct books
- Primers teach reading, but also turn innately
sinful children into spiritual beings - Themes of death, damnation, conversion
-
- Image From New England Primer, circa 1690
10A little light bedtime reading . . .
- Popular reading for Protestant children
- Book of Martyrs (1563), Anti-Catholic account of
Bloody Mary - The Day of Doom (1662), poem of damnation of
world - Images Thomas Foxe, Book of Martyrs, 1563
Michael Wigglesworth, The Day of Doom, 1662
11Children can be Reasonable, too The
Enlightenment (late 17th, 18th centuries)
- John Locke (1632-1704)
- Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693)
- Young mind as tabula rasa (blank slate)
- Children not burdened by original sin
- Logical beings awaiting proper educationrational
writings - Whole new construction of childhooddistinct
phase of life - Image John Locke
12Romanticism (late 18th, early 19th centuries)
Enter Innocence
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Emile (1755)Children should be raised in natural
settings, free to imagine - Children naturally innocent, moral The child
is the father of the man (Wordsworth) - Books should free childrens imaginations
- Romantics influence writers of Golden Age
- Image Jean-Jacques Rousseau
13Folktales, Fairy Tales, and the New Child
- Complicated role of fairy tales in literary
history of 18th, 19th centuries - Romantic interest in folktalescollect
authentic culture - But Enlightenment thinkers disapprovefolk
culture too childlike and fantastic - Fairy tales eventually deemed appropriate only
for children and the folk (peasant, simple,
lower class) - More educated could be intellectually interested
in folk culture and the LITERARY tale -
-
14Key Figures of Literary Fairy Tale
- Charles Perrault (1628-1703)
- Tales from Times Past or, Tales of Mother Goose
(1697) - Retellings literary renderings of Cinderella,
Little Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty, etc. - Some explicitly directed toward children
- Image Histoires ou Contes du temps passé
avec des moralitez, 1697
15Key Figures of Literary Fairy Tale
- Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm
- Nursery and Household Tales (1812-1815) directed
explicitly toward children - Clean up folktales develop Perraults
literary fairy tales - Rewrite to fit 19th-century sensibilities and
ideas about morality, politics, social class,
etc. - Image Little Brother Little Sister and
Other Tales by the Brothers Grimm, illus. Arthur
Rackham, 1917