Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Most Commented On
Archives
Blog
Link This | Email this | Blog This | Comments (7)
Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way?November 2, 2009It does appear to be wandering in circles. I missed the anniversary of Anita Silvey's article "Has the Newbery Lost it's Way?" by exactly one month. But will mark its thirteen months by inviting people to read--or at least dip into--Christine Jenkins excellent article of thirteen years ago in Library Trends: "Women of ALA Youth Services and Professional Jurisdiction: Of Nightingales, Newberies, Realism, and the Right Books, 1937-1945." I read this article in KT Horning's excellent online course: The Newbery Medal: Past, Present and Future. (Now in session, registration closed, but check back again!) A tidbit, from an article by Clara Breed in the Wilson Library Bulletin May 1942...referenced in Jenkins' article and available in full as part of KTs amazing course reading list: “It would be a dull world if we were all agreed upon anything—the Roosevelt family or lemon juice before breakfast—but perhaps the Newbery Medal would not be criticized so much if it were really understood…. Indeed the complaints about the Newbery Medal usually insist that the medal be something it is not. Elementary teachers say that the books chosen are too old, junior high teachers that the books are too young. An author of boys’ books says the books are too feminine and too tender-minded. A parent objects that the selections too often have been books with foreign backgrounds….Sometimes it seems as if all these people had joined hands and were chanting in unison “the Newbery books are not popular.” Posted by Nina Lindsay on November 2, 2009 | Comments (7)
November 2, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Anon. commented: The Library Trends article Nina linked to above pointed to a supposed breach in the 1920' and 1930's between librarians and educators, concerning so-called sentimental (girlie) fantacy books championed by librarians vs. the more interesting (masculine) reality books as championed by educators.
November 2, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Wendy commented: Isn't it interesting, anon, that only three of those books have female protagonists? And yet you claim these books are "too girlie", as if the Newbery has some kind of imperative to appeal to boys or girls in particular, as if "girlie" is an insult.
November 2, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Anon. commented: When I say girlie I'm not refering to girls as a gender. I'm refering to the subject matter.
November 3, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Nina commented: Anon, the funniest thing about these, quote, cycles, is that because they do seem to repeat over the decades, they would seem intentional, and yet...every committee has completely different people from one year to the next. A different way to look at them--rather than *corrective* to one trend or another (popularity, girlie, boyey)--is to see them as *productive* of the *range* of distinguished writing for children. How boring if we got a book every year that appealed to the same kind of person.
November 3, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Nina commented: (whoops. Copy and paste mistake above. I was done. For now.)
November 3, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Julie commented: The issue of audience age will continue to be an issue, one in which the committee itself must dissect and apply to individual books. That aside, the appeal of the book, considering setting, time period, POV, or theme boils, down to one criteria: does the voice speak to the reader.
November 6, 2009
In response to: Has the Newbery Controversy Lost its Way? Sondy commented: Another interesting thing about "trends" is that if you flip a fair coin for a long time, statistically speaking you will get strings of heads and tails. We try to read meaning into it, but the "strings" of "boy books" or "girl books" may just be random.
Advertisement
|
|