Iconographies of ‘Childness’ and the Contemporary British Novel: Book Covers, Discourses, and Cultural Models

Author:

Schneider Ralf1

Affiliation:

1. RWTH Aachen Aachen Germany

Abstract

Abstract A sizeable segment of the contemporary British fiction market for adult readers consists of novels that focus on children and childhood. In accordance with interdisciplinary Childhood Studies, such texts can be understood as contributions to the social construction of children and childhood, or ‘childness’. Such constructions appear to be in particular demand in this phase of late modernity, when childhood is conceptualized as an antidote to the many uncertainties contemporary post-industrial societies are faced with. While on the level of societies, public constructions of childhood are best understood in terms of a Foucauldian notion of discourse, discourses are not what individual readers and book-buyers actually have in their minds when choosing a title. Rather, this article argues that the cover illustrations of these novels both activate and reinforce cultural models of ‘childness’ that readers have stored as schemata shared with their cultural community. On the basis of this alignment of discourse theory with a concept from cognitive anthropology, the article demonstrates that book covers play a role in maintaining particular conceptions of ‘childness’, and in feeding them back into the minds of the readers. Furthermore, the relevance of the book as a material artefact is once again acknowledged.1

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference62 articles.

1. Adams, Thomas R. and Nicolas Barker. 1993. “A New Model for the Study of the Book”. In: Nicolas Barker (ed.). A Potencie of Life: Books in Society. London: British Library. 5–43.

2. Alanen, Leena. 2005. “Women’s Studies/Childhood Studies: Parallels, Links and Perspectives”. In: Jan Mason and Toby Fattore (eds.). Children Taken Seriously: In Theory, Policy and Practices. London: J. Kingsley Publishers. 31–45.

3. Alanen, Leena. 2009. “Generational Order”. In: Jens Qvortrup, William A. Corsaro and Michael-Sebastian Honig (eds.). The Palgrave Handbook of Childhood Studies. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 159–174.

4. Ariès, Philippe. 1960/1962. Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life. Trans. Robert Baldick. New York: Vintage.

5. Baumann, Zygmunt. 2000. Liquid Modernity. London: Polity Press.

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