Reading and Rebellion
An Anthology of Radical Writing for Children 1900-1960
Michael Rosen editor Kimberley Reynolds editor Jane Rosen editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:27th Sep '18
Should be back in stock very soon
Kim Reynolds, Jane Rosen, and Michael Rosen present a new anthology of radical writings for children from the first half of the twentieth century. In the years 1900 to 1960, large sections of the British population embraced a spectrum of left-wing positions with a view to maintaining peace and creating a more just, less class riven, more planned, and more enjoyable society for all. Children's books and periodicals were a central part of radical activity since the young were expected not just to inherit but also to help make this new society, and reading was regarded as the most direct way of helping them acquire the skills for this task. From alphabets through picture books, periodicals, information books, plays, song-books, pamphlets, and novels, many works of children's literature leaned left, but with the possible exception of references to Geoffrey Trease's Bows Against the Barons (1934), a Marxist retelling of the Robin Hood story, it is almost impossible to realise this from standard accounts of this period. This anthology contains a wide selection of the kinds of materials that left-wing and progressive parents would have wanted their children to read and which children understood as part of their initiation into a politically radical class.
As an addition to the history of children's literature, Reading and Rebellion is both nuanced and intriguing. * Imogen Russell Williams, The Times Literary Supplement *
Doing Reading and Rebellion justice in a thousand words is impossible...s, I was deeply impressed by Reading and Rebellion and learned a great deal from it. The book will surely endure as an indispensable reference for anyone interested in radical political cultures and childhood in the UK and beyond. And if we are lucky it will inspire even more collections of radical children's literature from other parts of the world. * Julia Mickenberg, The University of Texas at Austin, International Research in Children's Literature *
For a very modest £25 you get a huge amount of material: over 150 pages of history and commentary on a seriously neglected period, which alone would make the book worthwhile ... An impressive project, very well done. Buy it. You won't be disappointed. * Peter Hunt, Children's Books History Society *
The perfect read for a New Year and a new generation who more than anyone else will help ensure a future where peace and goodwill is more than a seasonal marketing gimmick but instead at the core of human existence. * Mark Perryman, Philosophy Football *
This anthology is a joy to read. Its richness and variety reminds me of Inside the Rainbow (Redstone Press, 2013), the astonishing collection of Russian children's illustrations from 1920-1935, but whereas that focused on one country and one short period of time, Reading and Rebellion casts its net wider in both time and space. The familiar (to me, at least: Im not sure how much Geoffrey Trease is read these days) and the (to me, at least) completely unknown, such as Micky Mongrel, the class conscious dog, a cartoon from the Daily Worker, sit happily side by side with stories, advice, history, information, moral homilies, fairy tales, and every conceivable kind of writing from a left-wing perspective. Given the stultifyingly conservative narrowness of the vast majority of the children's literature that's all most of us know, this is a fresh wind, and I enjoyed it enormously. * Philip Pullman *
ISBN: 9780198806189
Dimensions: 254mm x 196mm x 28mm
Weight: 1250g
496 pages