Beyond the Secret Garden: : children's literature and representations of black and racially minoritised people

Beyond the Secret Garden: : children's literature and representations of black and racially minoritised people

  • ただいまウェブストアではご注文を受け付けておりません。 ⇒古書を探す
  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 208 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781906101749

Full Description

Drawing on and expanding their long-running column for Books for Keeps, Darren Chetty and Professor Karen Sands O'Connor trace how Black and racially minoritised characters have been represented in 'the secret garden' of British children's literature from its earliest stages. Examining how children's literature has both been shaped by, and shaped, prevailing attitudes towards people of colour, they take a thematic approach that offers teachers and parents contextual knowledge that will enrich how books are discussed with children.

Contents

About the Authors

Foreword

Introduction

A Note on Terminology

You Can't Say That! Stories Have to be About White People

Books children read, and books they write

Section 1 - 'Classic' Children's Literature

& Britain's Children's Book Industry

The Fantasy of Story

Finding a way into the secret garden of children's books

Island Kingdoms and Robinsonades

Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe and why it still matters

Classic Literature and Classic Mistakes

How to approach (and not to approach) classic children's books

With You in History

Using traditional forms to tell Black Britain's story

The Other Side of the Story

Historical fiction and nonfiction for children from a different point of view

Guardian's Galaxy

The Guardian children's fiction prize and Black Britain

And the Winner Isn't

Prizes and Black British children's literature

Carnegies So White

The Carnegie Medal controversy and racially minoritised readers and writers

Black & White & Read All Over

Diversity and the Carnegie Medal

Drawing Conclusions

The Kate Greenaway Medal and racially minoritised readers and writers

On Values, Knowledge and the Imagination

White British writers and representation

Witness Literature

Speaking up for someone else's community

Section 2 - Books and Belongings

World Book Day

Books, dressing up, and racially minoritised children

Whose World?

World Book Day and selecting the books for 2017

England's White and Pleasant Land

Connecting racially minoritised readers to British spaces

From the Street to the Garden: Nature and Black Britain

Britain's natural world and racially minoritised readers

Reading Joyfully

Finding and foregrounding joy in books about racially minoritised children

Animal Fables and Dehumanisation in Children's Books

The problem of substituting animals for human characters

We English

Nonfiction for children and who counts as English

Taking Series Seriously

Readers finding themselves in series books

Lessons from School Books

School stories as a microcosm of society

Section 3 - Making Change

A Change is Gonna Come

Book Creators speak up at Seven Stories' Diverse Voices Symposium

#Reflecting Realities and #OwnVoices

Campaigning to make British children's books more representative

The Value of Reflecting Realities for all Readers

Farrah Serroukh on why she started the Reflecting Realities reports

We're Here Because You Were There ... and There, and There

Literature by and about migrants from Britain's former colonies

Stan Firm Inna Inglan

Growing up Black and British in the Thatcher era

Powerful Politics

The right to speak up in British children's literature

In Times of Peril

South Asian and Muslim representation after the 7/7 bombings

East Asian Characters in British Children's Fiction

Expanding the definition of 'Asian' in British children's books

Jewish Representation in British Children's Books

Exploring the portrayal of Jewish people in British children's books

Gypsy, Roma and Traveller Representation in British Children's Literature

Revising representation for all British readers

Mixed, not Mixed Up

Characters with multiple heritage backgrounds

How to Write Children's Books About Africa?

Stereotyping a continent - and how some authors resist stereotypes

Home is Where You're Understood

LGBTQ+ identities and racially minoritised characters

Palestinian People in Children's Books

How British children's books have represented Palestinians

It Starts in Wales

Expanding the definition of Britishness beyond whiteness through Welsh books

Home from Home?

Racially minoritised characters embrace their Britishness

Book List