Abstract
This essay uses performance theory to intervene in a decades-long debate
about a characteristic of children's literature: it is the only major
category of literature written by one group (adults) for another (children).
According to a contested but tenacious school of thought, this difference
between writers and readers embeds top-down power, or adult domination of
children, in children's literature. I identify a popular subcategory of
children's literature, the “going-to-bed book” (exemplified by Margaret Wise
Brown and Clement Hurd's Goodnight Moon), which
appears to epitomize and therefore shore up this top-down model. I then read
going-to-bed books through function—that is, the ritualistic actions or
performances that these books prompt, or script, among child and adult
readers. This mode of analysis initially produces seemingly powerful
evidence in support of the top-down model of children's literature; but that
evidence, as I show by examining two recent best sellers, ultimately
unravels.
Publisher
Modern Language Association (MLA)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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