1st Edition

History and the Construction of the Child in Early British Children's Literature

By Jackie C. Horne Copyright 2011
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    How did the 'flat' characters of eighteenth-century children's literature become 'round' by the mid-nineteenth? While previous critics have pointed to literary Romanticism for an explanation, Jackie C. Horne argues that this shift can be better understood by looking to the discipline of history. Eighteenth-century humanism believed the purpose of history was to teach private and public virtue by creating idealized readers to emulate. Eighteenth-century children's literature, with its impossibly perfect protagonists (and its equally imperfect villains) echoes history's exemplar goals. Exemplar history, however, came under increasing pressure during the period, and the resulting changes in historiographical practice - an increased need for reader engagement and the widening of history's purview to include the morals, manners, and material lives of everyday people - find their mirror in changes in fiction for children. Horne situates hitherto neglected Robinsonades, historical novels, and fictionalized histories within the cultural, social, and political contexts of the period to trace the ways in which idealized characters gradually gave way to protagonists who fostered readers' sympathetic engagement. Horne's study will be of interest to specialists in children's literature, the history of education, and book history.

    Contents: Introduction: setting off on an exemplary adventure; The emergence of the ordinary: parents and children on the deserted isle; The failure of the ordinary: the function of death in the family Robinsonade; Engaging the ordinary reader: fictionalized history for children; 'Men in petticoats' and girls in pants: contesting ordinary femininity in historical fiction for girls; Epilogue: the end of an adventure?; Works cited; Index.

    Biography

    Jackie C. Horne, a former children's book editor, taught as an Assistant Professor at the Center for the Study of Children's Literature at Simmons College. She is the co-editor of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows: A Children's Classic at 100.

    Prize: 'Recommended' book for 2011 by the Children's Literature Association 'The first half of the nineteenth century has for too long been regarded as a sort of dead-zone for British children's books, as if authors and readers were somehow in a limbo, waiting for the arrival of children's literature’s Golden Age. At last, here is a book that puts this right, showing us some of the wonderfully innovative and imaginative children’s books published in the age before Alice. Looking at both works of fiction and history, and most intriguingly at books that span the divide, Jackie Horne has produced a riveting study that opens our eyes to the experimentation being undertaken by forgotten authors like Agnes Strickland, Barbara Hofland and Jefferys Taylor. This is a fascinating study that rescues some marvellous books from undeserved obscurity and subjects them to perceptive and stimulating analysis. It will force scholars of both children's literature and the history of education to reconsider their view of this too often neglected period.' M. O. Grenby, Newcastle University, UK 'This is an intelligent, interesting and thought-provoking book about some of the crucial changes which took place in children's literature between 1780 and 1840. Well-written and extremely well-researched... there is so much to admire in Jackie Horne's stimulating book.' Children's Books History Society Newsletter 'To its great credit, this book richly explains the pleasures - both casual and formal - of pedagogical literature. It also makes two major points about adolescent fiction: it can prompt us to identify with ordinary characters even while delivering moral lessons, and it can trump its status as a subgenre to become significant as literature. Lionel Trilling wrote of E.M. Forster that he was "the only living novelist who can be read again and again and who, after each reading, gives me what few writers can give us after our first days of novel-reading, the sensation of having learne