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Medina, Yvonne – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
Theodore Taylor's "The Cay" received a great deal of criticism upon its publication in 1969 for its racism, yet it has remained in American public school curricula for over fifty years. Defenders of the novel have argued that it advocates for color-blindness, a position that has helped entrench it in schools. Meanwhile, few critics have…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Novels, Racism, Disabilities
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Kerby, Martin Charles; Baguley, Margaret Mary; MacDonald, Abbey – Children's Literature in Education, 2019
Over the past two decades children's picture books dealing with the Australian experience during the First World War have sought to balance a number of thematic imperatives. The increasingly sentimentalised construct of the Australian soldier as a victim of trauma, the challenge of providing a moral lesson that reflects both modern ideological…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Picture Books, War, World History
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Tagwirei, Cuthbeth – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This article demonstrates, through Michael Gascoigne's "Tunzi the Faithful Shadow" (1988), that literature for children is sometimes employed by the government into the service of propagating dominant state ideologies in Zimbabwean schools. Such texts disseminate issues of inclusion and exclusion that characterise all nation building…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Developing Nations, Ideology, Social Change
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Sawers, Naarah – Children's Literature in Education, 2009
In an era when the merger between capitalism and science becomes an accepted norm, new questions need to be asked about the ethical implications of scientific practices. One such practice is organ transplantation. However, potent debates surround the just distribution and ethical implications of organ transplantation. This paper examines the ways…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fiction, Social Systems, Ideology
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Travis, Madelyn – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
Scholars have posited various theories as to which sector of society Mary Norton's Borrowers most closely reflect, from exploitative aristocrats to helpless victims. Through social and literary contextualization, this article highlights the ways in which Norton represents social class in the series and explores the competing ideologies embedded in…
Descriptors: Social Class, Childrens Literature, Novels, Ideology
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Lea, Susan G. – Children's Literature in Education, 2006
The secondary worlds created in fantasy encourage the reader to compare and contrast the real world with the imaginary. In this way, fantasy as a genre can be transformative. In this article, the dystopia created in "The Giver" (1993) by Lois Lowry is examined as a metaphor for racism. After exploring the young adult novel as mystical fantasy in…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Novels, Adolescent Literature, Figurative Language
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Ferguson, Felicity – Children's Literature in Education, 2006
The subject of this article is "The Royal Readers", a group of reading anthologies published in Britain by Thomas Nelson between 1872 and 1881 for use in elementary schools. The focus is not on their contribution to the teaching of reading but rather on how they functioned as the tools of an education system conceived primarily as an agent of…
Descriptors: Anthologies, Reading, Socialization, Ideology