ABSTRACT

We are fascinated by text and we are fascinated by reading. Is this because we are in a time of textual change? Given that young people always seem to be in the vanguard of technological change, questions about what and how they read are the subject of intense debate. Children as Readers in Children’s Literature explores these questions by looking at the literature that is written for children and young people to see what it tells us about them as readers. The contributors to this book are a group of distinguished children’s literature scholars, literacy and media specialists who contemplate the multiple images of children as readers and how they reflect the power and purpose of texts and literacy.

Contributors to this wide-ranging text consider:

  • How books shape the readers we become
  • Cognitive and affective responses to representation of books and reading   
  • The relationship between love-stories and reading as a cultural activity 
  • Reading as ‘Protection and Enlightenment’
  • Picturebooks as stage sets for acts of reading
  • Readers’ perceptions of a writer

This portrayal of books and reading also reveals adults’ beliefs about childhood and literacy and how they are changing. It is a theme of crucial significance in the shaping of future generations of readers given these beliefs influence not only ideas about the teaching of literature but also about the role of digital technologies. This text is a must-read for any individual interested in the importance of keeping literature alive through reading.

part I|37 pages

Reading for life

chapter 1|13 pages

‘Everybody knew that books were dangerous'

Cognitive and affective responses to representation of books and reading

chapter 2|12 pages

Taken as read

Readers in books and the importance of reading, 1744–2003

chapter 3|10 pages

All for love

The relationship between love-stories and reading as a cultural activity

part II|41 pages

Reading and its consequences

chapter 5|10 pages

Of readers and vermin

The consequences of literacy for ‘parasites’

chapter 6|10 pages

The forbidden word

Readers in dystopia

part III|51 pages

Reading in new ways

chapter 8|10 pages

Readers' perceptions of a writer

Jacqueline Wilson's persona and her relationship with her readers

chapter 9|14 pages

‘What else can this book do?’

Picturebooks as stage sets for acts of reading

chapter 11|13 pages

‘This is my show!’

Beyond reading to envisioning and enacting