ABSTRACT

This volume of 14 original essays by historians and literary scholars explores childhood and children's books in Early Modern Europe, 1550-1800. The collection aims to reposition childhood as a compelling presence in early modern imagination--a ready emblem of innocence, mischief, and playfulness. The essays offer a wide-ranging basis for reconceptualizing the development of a separate literature for children as central to evolving early modern concepts of human development and socialization. Among the topics covered are constructs of literacy as revealed by the figure of Goody Two Shoes, notions of pedagogy and academic standards, a reception study of children's reading based on book purchases made by Rugby school boys in the late eighteenth-century, an analysis of the first international best-seller for children, the abbe Pluche's Spectacle de la nature, and the commodification of child performers in Jacobean comedies.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

Little Differences: Children, Their Books, and Culture in the Study of Early Modern Europe

chapter 2|21 pages

Learning to Laugh

Children and Being Human in Early Modern Thought

chapter 3|13 pages

“Oh that I Had Her!”

The Voice of the Child in a Body Possessed

chapter 5|27 pages

“Pretty Fictions” and “Little Stories”

Child Actors on the Early Modern Stage

chapter 6|24 pages

The Godly Child's “Power and Evidence” in the Word

Orality and Literacy in the Ministry of Sarah Wight

chapter 7|25 pages

“In the Posture of Children”

Eighteenth-Century British Servants and Children

chapter 8|28 pages

Curiosity, Science, and Experiential Learning in the Eighteenth Century

Reading the Spectacle de la nature

chapter 9|31 pages

“Governesses to Their Children”

Royal and Aristocratic Mothers Educating Daughters in the Reign of George III

chapter 10|30 pages

Spectral Literacy

The Case of Goody Two-Shoes

chapter 11|17 pages

Solace in Books

Reading Trifling Adventures at Rugby School

chapter 12|16 pages

Performance, Pedagogy, and Politics

Mrs. Thrale, Mrs. Barbauld, Monsieur Itard

chapter 13|27 pages

Otto's Watch

Enlightenment, Virtue, and Time in the Eighteenth Century

chapter 14|23 pages

The School of Life

Reflections on Socialization in Preindustrial Germany