ABSTRACT

This collection explores the significance of New York City in children’s literature, stressing literary, political, and societal influences on writing for young people from the twentieth century to the present day. Contextualized in light of contemporary critical and cultural theory, the chapters examine the varying ways in which children’s literature has engaged with New York City as a city space, both in terms of (urban) realism and as an ‘idea’, such as the fantasy of the city as a place of opportunity, or other associations. The collection visits not only dominant themes, motifs, and tropes, but also the different narrative methods employed to tell readers about the history, function, physical structure, and conceptualization of New York City, acknowledging the shared or symbiotic relationship between literature and the city: just as literature can give imaginative ‘reality’ to the city, the city has the potential to shape the literary text. This book critically engages with most of the major forms and genres for children/young adults that dialogue with New York City, and considers such authors as Margaret Wise Brown, Felice Holman, E. L. Konigsburg, Maurice Sendak, J. D. Salinger, John Donovan, Shaun Tan, Elizabeth Enright, and Patti Smith.

 

chapter Chapter One|15 pages

Bank Street and Beyond

New York City in the Here and Now Books of Lucy Sprague Mitchell and Margaret Wise Brown

chapter Chapter Two|12 pages

‘Form Follows Function’

Elizabeth Enright's Melendy Quartet (1941–1951)

chapter Chapter Four|11 pages

Navigating Adolescence through the Streets of New York

I'll Get There. It Better Be Worth the Trip

chapter Chapter Five|15 pages

‘Cities Will Sing’

Natural New York

chapter Chapter Six|12 pages

A City Cold and Wild

Nature and Social Justice in Slake's Limbo and Ten Mile River

chapter Chapter Seven|12 pages

‘New York is a Great Place’

Urban Mobility in Twentieth-Century Children's Literature

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

Catalysing Urban Interaction

Individual and Crowded Identities in New York City

chapter Chapter Nine|11 pages

Self in the City

Young Adult Fiction about New York Cityafter 9/11

chapter Chapter Ten|11 pages

I am an Island

Caribbean Immigrants to New York City in Children's Literature

chapter Chapter Eleven|14 pages

The View from the Top of the Bus

Curious George in Émigré New York

chapter Chapter Twleve|14 pages

New York City

A Dystopian Utopia in Visual Narratives

chapter Chapter Thirteen|17 pages

A Right to Music

New York and Mid-Century Liberal Imagination in The Cricket in Times Square

chapter Chapter Fourteen|10 pages

Just Kids

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Androgyne in New York