It is argued that there are several problems with Peter Hollindale’s concept, “childness.” First, it is suggested that the term not only has too much semantic latitude, but that its definitional attributes are themselves incompatible, pulling in different directions: from the pragmatic and empirical to the more figurative and aspirational. Linked with this point is a second one: that despite Hollindale’s avowed claim that his term is ‘extremely flexible, and … historically, socially and culturally determined’ (pp. 76-7), it ultimately defers to a biological essentialism. Thirdly, and as a result of this, the term fails adequately to address many key issues in children’s literature criticism, despite Hollindale’s otherwise exemplary ...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...
A book review of David Rudd\u27s book "Reading the Child in Children’s Literature: An Heretical Appr...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...
It is argued that there are several problems with Peter Hollindale’s concept, “childness.” First, i...
This article looks at child-authored texts, both real and fictional, and the adult discourse surroun...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
What does it mean for a child to fulfil his or her potential? This article explores the contexts and...
In his 1814 review of Wordsworth’s ‘The Excursion’, Charles Lamb wrote that ‘[Wordsworth’s] verses s...
Review of: Harde, Roxanne, and Kokkola, Lydia, editors. The Embodied Child: Readings in Children’s L...
What does it mean for a child to fulfil his or her potential? This article explores the contexts and...
This article argues a different understanding to that in children’s literature studies more widely o...
Both 'philosophy' and 'the child' are notions that seem to have an everlasting presence in our daily...
Cerebral Pleasures brings together two fields concerned with the edification of children’s minds: ch...
It is assumed that before about the middle of the seventeenth century the symbol of the child or ind...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...
A book review of David Rudd\u27s book "Reading the Child in Children’s Literature: An Heretical Appr...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...
It is argued that there are several problems with Peter Hollindale’s concept, “childness.” First, i...
This article looks at child-authored texts, both real and fictional, and the adult discourse surroun...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
What does it mean for a child to fulfil his or her potential? This article explores the contexts and...
In his 1814 review of Wordsworth’s ‘The Excursion’, Charles Lamb wrote that ‘[Wordsworth’s] verses s...
Review of: Harde, Roxanne, and Kokkola, Lydia, editors. The Embodied Child: Readings in Children’s L...
What does it mean for a child to fulfil his or her potential? This article explores the contexts and...
This article argues a different understanding to that in children’s literature studies more widely o...
Both 'philosophy' and 'the child' are notions that seem to have an everlasting presence in our daily...
Cerebral Pleasures brings together two fields concerned with the edification of children’s minds: ch...
It is assumed that before about the middle of the seventeenth century the symbol of the child or ind...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...
A book review of David Rudd\u27s book "Reading the Child in Children’s Literature: An Heretical Appr...
A child arrives as a new world because in her and with her we feel that the whole world can start ov...