ABSTRACT

Children's literature is an amorphous, ambiguous creature; its relationship to its audience is difficult; its relationship to the rest of literature, problematic. As I suggested in the companion volume to this book, Children's Literature: the development of criticism, its critics have had to grapple with fundamental issues of classification and evaluation, to encompass a huge field and a large number of ‘adjacent’ disciplines, as well as communicating to a largely lay audience.