Fantasy and the Real World in British Children’s Literature by Caroline Webb

2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 263-266
Author(s):  
Emma Butcher
2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 538-541
Author(s):  
Jorie Borden ◽  
Elsa Geskus

The phenomenal resurgence of children's literature in the marketplace has allowed teachers to help their students construct new knowledge by fostering the love of literature while teaching skills and knowledge. Principles and Standards for School Mathematics (NCTM 2000) recommends connecting mathematics with the real-world experiences of children. The authors chose Cook-a-Doodle-Doo! (Stevens and Crummel 1999) to provide students with opportunities for problem solving, estimating, predictive reading, and enjoyable eating.


Author(s):  
Luana Santos Nogueira Garcia ◽  
Maritza Maciel Castrillon Maldonado

Este trabalho se insere em um projeto de pesquisa da Universidade do Estado de Mato Grosso denominado: “Cinema, Infâncias e Diferença: problematizando a educação, o cotidiano da escola e o currículo”. Tendo como objetivo discutir a influência do filme: Alice no país das maravilhas (1951) para entender como esta obra cinematográfica esfacela, desmonta e descontrói a idealização de infância. Ainda, se apoia no pensamento de Deleuze (2007) para demonstrar que a vida real é cheia de paradoxos, que fogem da lógica, carregando antagonismos, produzindo múltiplos sentidos e desencadeando diferentes representações. O trabalho tem como proposta metodológica a pesquisa bibliográfica e o estudo reflexivo sobre o filme de Tim Burton. Os resultados deste estudo permitem problematizar e pensar diferentes “concepções” de infância já colocadas e instituídas, que (des)compõe o sentido real de ser criança. Palavras-chave: Literatura Infantil. Infância. Paradoxos. AbstractThis work is part of a research project of  Universidade do Estado de Mato Grosso denominated “Cinema, Childhood and Difference: questioning education, school everyday and the curriculum”. In order to discuss the influence of the film Alice in the Wonderland (1951) to understand how this film destroys , disassembles, deconstructs the idealization of childhood. Also, it corroborates the thought of Deleuze (2007) to demonstrate that real life is full of paradoxes that are out of logic, carrying antagonisms, producing multiple senses and triggering different representations. The work has as methodological approach the bibliographical research and the reflective study on the Tim Burton’s film. The results of this study allow to problematize and think about different “conceptions” of childhood already placed and imposed that (des) composes the real sense of being a child. Keywords: Children's Literature. Childhood. Paradoxes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Beatrice Turner

<p>This thesis examines eight "Golden Age"children's fantasy narratives and uncovers their engagement with the "impossibility" of writing the child. Only recently has children's literature criticism recognised that the child in the text and the implied child reader cannot stand in for the "real" child reader. This is an issue which other literary criticism has been at pains to acknowledge, but which children's literature critics have neglected. I have based my reading on critics such as Karin Lesnik-Oberstein, Jacqueline Rose and Perry Nodelman, all of whom are concerned to expose the term "child" as an adult cultural construction, one which becomes problematic when it is made to stand in for real children. I read the child in the text as an entity which contains and is tainted by the trace of the adult who writes it; it is therefore impossible for a pure, innocent child to exist in language, the province of the adult. Using Derrida's conception of the trace and his famous statement that "there is nothing outside of the text," I demonstrate that the idea of the innocent child, which was central to Rousseau's Emile and the Romantic Child which is supposed to have been authored by Wordsworth and inherited wholesale by his Victorian audience, is possible only as a theory beyond language. The Victorian texts I read, which include Lewis Carroll's Alice texts, George MacDonald's At the Back of the North Wind and the Princess texts, Kingsley's The Water Babies and Mrs. Molesworth's The Cuckoo Clock and The Tapestry Room, all explore different ways in which the child might be successfully articulated: in language, in death, and through the return journey into fantasy. While all the texts attempt to reach the child, all ultimately foreground the failure of this enterprise. When a language is created which is child-authored, it fails as communication and meaning breaks down; when the adult ceases to write the narrative, the child within it ceases to exist.</p>


1994 ◽  
Vol 41 (8) ◽  
pp. 436-441
Author(s):  
David J. Whitin

Estimation is a crucial mathematical strategy that can be woven throughout the entire mathematics curriculum. The strategy can certainly foster the development of many of the goals advocated by the NCTM's curriculum and evaluation standards (1989). Since approximately 80 percent of real-world applications of mathematics involve estimation or mental computation, the goal of becoming an “informed electorate” requires us to use and analyze various estimation strategies.


Revue Romane ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-110
Author(s):  
María Rosal

The object of this essay is to analyze a basic part of the work of the Spanish, Granada-born poet, Elena Martín Vivaldi, as well as her opinions and arguments about children’s literature. We start with the idea in the poetic work of Martín Vivaldi that there are some poems that stand out and could be aimed towards a children´s audience because of their subject matter, intention, and even their genesis. In this sense we want to reflect on the real possibilities that the work of this Spanish poet can connect with readers of different ages, and we suggest a corpus close to the taste of the youngest readers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Beatrice Turner

<p>This thesis examines eight "Golden Age"children's fantasy narratives and uncovers their engagement with the "impossibility" of writing the child. Only recently has children's literature criticism recognised that the child in the text and the implied child reader cannot stand in for the "real" child reader. This is an issue which other literary criticism has been at pains to acknowledge, but which children's literature critics have neglected. I have based my reading on critics such as Karin Lesnik-Oberstein, Jacqueline Rose and Perry Nodelman, all of whom are concerned to expose the term "child" as an adult cultural construction, one which becomes problematic when it is made to stand in for real children. I read the child in the text as an entity which contains and is tainted by the trace of the adult who writes it; it is therefore impossible for a pure, innocent child to exist in language, the province of the adult. Using Derrida's conception of the trace and his famous statement that "there is nothing outside of the text," I demonstrate that the idea of the innocent child, which was central to Rousseau's Emile and the Romantic Child which is supposed to have been authored by Wordsworth and inherited wholesale by his Victorian audience, is possible only as a theory beyond language. The Victorian texts I read, which include Lewis Carroll's Alice texts, George MacDonald's At the Back of the North Wind and the Princess texts, Kingsley's The Water Babies and Mrs. Molesworth's The Cuckoo Clock and The Tapestry Room, all explore different ways in which the child might be successfully articulated: in language, in death, and through the return journey into fantasy. While all the texts attempt to reach the child, all ultimately foreground the failure of this enterprise. When a language is created which is child-authored, it fails as communication and meaning breaks down; when the adult ceases to write the narrative, the child within it ceases to exist.</p>


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