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Layfield, Allison – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
During the 1980s and 1990s, the multicultural education movement in the United States aimed to educate diverse students about a diverse United States. While the effects of multicultural education are often discussed in terms of its curriculum and effects on students, the movement's effects on the publishing system have been overlooked. This…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Diversity, Correlation, Activism
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Wissman, Kelly – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
This article explores how Sandra Cisneros alludes to and recasts popular fairy tales in "The House on Mango Street" to reveal their troubled legacy in the lives of many women in the novel. Drawing upon Latina feminist theory and Cisneros's autobiographical writing, this article posits that the main character Esperanza's alternative "happily ever…
Descriptors: Social Change, Literary Criticism, Fairy Tales, Feminism
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Chappell, Sharon; Faltis, Christian – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
This paper examines the ways in which Latino children's literature portrays cultural models of bilingualism and identity affiliations based on language and cultural practices. We focus attention on the messages in seven children's books about practices of and attitudes toward Spanglish, standard Spanish, and individual and societal bilingualism.…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Childrens Literature, Bilingualism, Hispanic American Literature
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Rice, Peggy S. – Children's Literature in Education, 2005
This article examines the responses of eight sixth grade students discussing four realistic fiction Hispanic-American multicultural stories with universal themes by Gary Soto in peer-led literature discussion groups. The results indicate the importance of a reader's sociocultural frame--class, race, and gender, on their interpretation of…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Hispanic American Literature, Fiction, Reader Response