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Ideology and Childrens Literature an article by Peter Hollindale

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Title: Ideology and Childrens Literature an article by Peter Hollindale


1
Ideology and Childrens Literaturean article by
Peter Hollindale
  • Presentation by Sandra Beals
  • CHL 518 History of Childrens Literature
  • Professor A. Wannamaker
  • Fall 2009

2
Definition Ideology
  • A systematic scheme of ideas, usu. relating to
    politics or society, or to the conduct of a class
    or group, and regarded as justifying actions,
    esp. one that is held implicitly or adopted as a
    whole and maintained regardless of the course of
    events.
  • Oxford English Dictionary

3
Ideology A Brief Guide
  • John Lye, a professor of English at Brock
    University in Ontario, presents a more complete
    description of ideology, with information about
    the history of the concept, see handout.
  • Points to remember
  • Marxist tradition
  • Maximum control with minimum conflict
  • Not deliberate
  • Values, conceptions of the world, symbol
    systems used to legitimize the current
    order
  • Inculcated through socialization and teaching,
    formally and informally
  • Ideology is inherently conservative it seeks
    to legitimize and perpetuate itself.

4
Catherine Belsey, Critical Practice
  • . . . ideology resides in common-places and
    truisms, as well as in philosophical and
    religious systems. It is apparent in all that is
    obvious to us . . . If it is true, however, it
    is not the whole truth. Ideology obscures the
    real conditions of existence by presenting
    partial truths. It is a set of omissions, gaps
    rather than lies, smoothing over contradictions,
    appearing to provide answers to questions which
    in practice is evades . . . (53)
  • Language carries ideology whether we are aware of
    it or not.
  • We absorb ideology as we learn to speak.
  • Language, and thus the ideology inscribed in it,
    shapes our thinking, in part by making some
    things seem natural, true, or right.
  • Ideology has the effect of hiding some aspects of
    reality, especially the fact that some aspects
    are hidden.

5
Peter HollindaleIdeology and Childrens
Literature (1988)
  • Book People
  • Lean toward valuing the aesthetic aspects of
    language and rhetoric that are acquired through
    study.
  • Tend to see childrens literature as a genre
  • Understand how literature can comment on,
    challenge, and highlight ideology
  • Child People
  • Lean toward correcting what is wrong with the
    current ideology racism, sexism, classism, etc.
  • Tend to see childrens literature in terms of its
    readership
  • Understand how the current dominant ideology
    disempowers many people

6
A problem a solution
  • According to Hollindale, the stereotyping and
    general polarization between these two groups is
    unproductive at best.
  • He suggests that instead of perpetuating a battle
    of values within the field, we should all focus
    on becoming skilled at detecting the ideology in
    texts and teaching children to do the same.

7
Three levels of ideology
  • 1. Intended surface ideology
  • 2. Unexamined beliefs of the writer that slip
    into the text unnoticed
  • 3. The reality of ideology hovering over us
    that herds writers and readers alike toward
    meanings that are consistent with it.

8
Learning to read a novel
  • While it may be difficult to change society
    through literature, because the current ideology
    is deeply embedded in the language we use, we can
    focus on skillful reading of texts in a way that
    brings the priorities of both book people and
    child people together and empowers children to
    resist the subtle influences of ideology.
  • The the key suggestion offered by Hollindale in
    his article is that we can do, and teach children
    to do, what critics do--read critically, so that
    to the limits of each childs capacity that child
    will not be at the mercy of what she reads
    (Hollindale 19) emphasis in original.

9
Fifty ways to leave your lover . . .or rather,
eight ways to lift ideology off the page
(Hollindale 22).
10
1. Transpose elements or reassign parts.
11
2. Consider the ending.
  • Example
  • Jos marriage. Readers wanted Jo to marry
    Laurie. This would have satisfied the prevailing
    view of what constitutes a happy ending for a
    woman. Alcott tried to rewrite this. Did she
    succeed?

12
3. Check for grouping or packaging of values in
familiar ways.
  • Example
  • Truth, Justice, the American Way

13
4. Look at different levels of meaning.
  • Does the work test and undermine some of the
    values which it superficially appears to be
    celebrating? (Hollindale 20)
  • Hollindale points to Huckleberry Finn and Tom
    Sawyer another example would be Machiavellis
    The Prince.

14
5. Look for moral symmetry in the work.
  • Are nice, easy-going people associated with
    good values or groups, and unpleasant or
    difficult characters left to embody the wrong
    values or groups?
  • NB This distinction is about ideology and
    temperament the reader will naturally judge the
    attitudes and beliefs of the good guys as
    positive, and those of the bad guys as
    unacceptable.

15
6. Look for a difficult decision that illustrates
the tension between socially accepted behavior
and a new value that the book is teaching.
16
7. Notice if identifiable groups are judged, as
groups, to have higher value than others.
  • Are the good guys all white, or girls, or
    members of the football team? In a book that is
    meant to show gender equality, do both parents
    have jobs outside the home but only the mother is
    shown doing housework?

17
8. Omissions and invisibility. Who or what is
missing?
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