Why Are They So Afraid of Children’s Books? The Subversive Power of Imagination (Part 1)
Why Are They So Afraid of Children’s Books? The Subversive Power of Imagination (Part 1)
Author(s): Olga BukhinaSubject(s): Anthropology, Social Sciences, Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Sociology, Comparative Study of Literature, Russian Literature, Philology, Theory of Literature, British Literature, American Literature
Published by: Wydział Polonistyki Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: banned books; carnivalesque; censorship; children’s and young adult literature; Mikhail Bakhtin; subversiveness
Summary/Abstract: The article discusses the subversive power of children’s books as it is expressed in many classical and contemporary works for young readers. Starting with a brief psychological explanation of the source of creativity and playfulness in children’s literature, the author uses a Bakhtinian approach in analysing the carnivalesque quality of these books in their ability to create a topsy-turvy world, to use ‘a festive laughter,’ to present grotesque bodily transformations, and to discuss the lower stratum bodily functions such as food consumption and excretion. Many adults often underestimate the power of children’s literature, and at the same time, some books are considered dangerous; therefore, they need to be protected from various attempts to censor or to ban them as unappropriated for children.
Journal: Dzieciństwo. Literatura i Kultura
- Issue Year: 1/2019
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 170-187
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English