ABSTRACT

The value of small-scale qualitative research projects into young people’s reading is often underestimated. Yet these finely tuned studies, with a precise focus and highly specialised approach, can provide us with profound insights into the richness and variety of young people’s reading practices.

Bringing together contributors from six continents, this fascinating volume explores researchers’ experiences of investigating the reading habits, preferences and practices of young people aged 12–21. Detailing a variety of empirical methodologies and research methods, its chapters also consider reading in an array of contexts, in various languages and using diverse media.

Key issues addressed in the book include:

  • the complexity of sociocultural similarities and differences in young people’s reading in international contexts
  • multilingual, bilingual and monolingual readers’ experiences of reading
  • how young readers use a range of different print and digital media
  • how our understanding of the range of texts available to young readers and the different contexts of and purposes for reading can be enhanced through small-scale qualitative research.

Providing in-depth discussion of contributors’ research and findings, and touching on many different contexts, text types and media, this volume will support and inspire current and future researchers, lecturers and teachers interested in young people’s reading.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part 1|54 pages

Making adolescent reading choices visible

chapter 1|20 pages

The possibilities of comics reading

Uncovering a complex and situated reading experience in Canada

chapter 2|16 pages

The residue of fiction in the memory of adolescence

The potential effect of reading fiction in Turkey

chapter 3|16 pages

Rivers of reading

A research method to explore young adults’ personal reading histories

part 2|49 pages

Adolescent reading in times of crisis

chapter 4|17 pages

Reading fears and opportunities

Researching changes over 25 years in the literacy practices of Mexican adolescents

chapter 6|14 pages

‘I think I was born with a suitcase’

Blackfoot adolescent readers’ responses to Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

part 3|70 pages

Young adult readers’ experiences within and beyond school and university

chapter 7|14 pages

Adolescent reading habits

The effect of school activities on reading practices

chapter 8|12 pages

Young people reading in Uganda

Making connections between literature and reality

chapter 9|17 pages

Exploring post-16 literature in English in a Malaysian classroom

A hermeneutic phenomenological perspective

chapter 10|15 pages

Pressure, pleasure and function

Malaysian undergraduates reading across boundaries in a university in England

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion