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The case of children's literature : colonial or anti-colonial?

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Clare BradfordClare Bradford
Since Jacqueline Rose published The Case of Peter Pan in 1984, scholars in the field of children’s literature have taken up a rhetorical stance which treats child readers as colonised, and children’s books as a colonising site. This article takes issue with Rose’s rhetoric of colonisation and its deployment by scholars, arguing that it is tainted by logical and ethical flaws. Rather, children’s literature can be a site of decolonisation which revisions the hierarchies of value promoted through colonisation and its aftermath by adopting what Bill Ashcroft refers to as tactics of interpolation. To illustrate how decolonising strategies work in children’s texts, the article considers several alphabet books by Indigenous author-illustrators from Canada and Australia, arguing that these texts for very young children interpolate colonial discourses by valorising minority languages and by attributing to English words meanings produced within Indigenous cultures.

History

Journal

Global Studies of Childhood

Volume

1

Issue

4

Pagination

271 - 279

Publisher

Symposium Journals

Location

Oxford, U.K.

ISSN

2043-6106

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Symposium Journals

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