A review of The Norton Anthology of Children's Literature: The Traditions
in English edited by Jack Zipes, Lissa Paul, Lynne Vallone, Peter Hunt,
and Gillian Avery
By Dorothea Israel
Wolfson
Posted August 2, 2006.
This article appeared
in the Summer 2006 issue
of the Claremont Review of Books.
Parents have always fretted about what
to read to their children, and experts have always been ready with advice. In
their educational writings, John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau together
mentioned only three books worthy of a child's mind. Locke recommended
Aesop's Fables and Reynard the Fox, while in Emile
the tutor Jean Jacques offered his charge only Robinson Crusoe. How
times have changed. The new 2,471-page, lap-crushing Norton Anthology of
Children's Literature includes several hundred entries, both old and new.
But far from representing an efflorescence in childhood literature, this volume
marks the genre's sad end.
The editors of the anthology acknowledge in
passing their debt to Locke and Rousseau—who in a sense created our modern
understanding of childhood, permanently influencing all subsequent children's
literature. The editors, however, wish to promote a revolution of their own: a
new, more candid, and frankly, more nihilistic corpus. Despite heralding
children's literature as "life-enhancing" and "life-changing," the Norton
editors aim in fact to dampen children's enchantment with the world, forcing
them to acquiesce to the grim realities and multicultural obsessions of
contemporary adults.
Of course, this could be because the book was never
meant to be read by or to children. The editors, all scholars of some sort, with
backgrounds in literature, education, and history, describe their handiwork as a
"more scholarly" anthology, one that incorporates "profound changes" from
earlier collections, and is intended mainly for the college student. Whereas
editors of previous anthologies "favored classic authors" and "canonical texts,"
with a minimum of reader notes and introductions, the Norton edition aims to be
more inclusive of "emergent" literature. As the editors state, "Our critical
perspectives, like those of scholars in other literary fields, have been greatly
influenced by the research and criticism rooted in the feminist and
multicultural movements." Their real hope is "to revolutionize the undergraduate
curriculum."
The anthology is divided into 19 chapters covering various
divisions within children's literature ("Chapbooks," "Primers and Readers,"
"Fairy Tales," "Classical Myths," "Legends," "Fantasy," "Verse," "Picture
Books," "Books of Instruction," etc.). Each chapter begins with a long
introduction in which the editors supply an overview of the genre's historical
trajectory, and discuss its defining works, including many hitherto unknown. The
chapters contain at least one "core" text in full, along with shorter or
excerpted "satellite" texts. Each text is preceded by laborious reader notes,
many of which are longer than the text itself. There is also a 32-page section
of illustrations from some of the great picture books, including Beatrix
Potter's Tales from Peter Rabbit, Jean de Brunhoff's The Story of
Babar the Little Elephant, Marjorie Flack's Angus the Duck, Ezra
Jack Keats's Snowy Day, and Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things
Are.
The editors included some genuine classics, to be sure, some
excerpted and some in full, like The New England Primer, A Child's
Garden of Verses, Peter Pan, Ramona and her Father,
chapbook versions of Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and Defoe's
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, and the poetry of Charles Causley and
Robert Graves, to name just a few. One could certainly quibble with the editors
about omitted texts. Why no poetry from Emily Dickinson, for instance, or any
meaningful mention of Shakespeare, whose plays were re-written into children's
story form by Charles and Mary Lamb? But such quibbling is to miss the larger
problem with this volume. It is not so much an anthology as a postmodernist
manifesto.
* * *
As the editors declare in the preface, "In our choice of texts and in our
introductions, we have paid close attention to...perceptions of race, class, and
gender, among other topics, in shaping children's literature and childhood
itself." Practically every text and every author (save for the "emergent") is
subjected to a wicked scolding from the editors for its racism, sexism, and
elitism. Forget about ogres, witches, monsters, and evil stepmoms; today's
villains are gender stereotypes, white males, the middle class, and the
traditional family. Retrograde literature must therefore be replaced by a new
one, one that is, as it were, beyond good and evil: "In our postmodern age, in
which absolute judgments of 'good' and 'evil' are no longer easily made, the
distinction between heroes and villains is often blurred."
The editors
herald this as a great advance, one they wish to promote by burying the stories
under a ton of commentary. To read a children's story out of context, say the
editors, is so passé (so childish?): "Discourses such as reader-response theory,
poststructuralism, semiotics, feminist theory, and postcolonial theory have
proven to be valuable in analyzing children's books." Thus the editors introduce
Fun with Dick and Jane by noting that the "world of Dick and Jane was
the idealized image of white, middle-class America." The introduction to the
chapter on "Legends," which includes The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
and King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, warns that "history
has generally been written by the victors and the elites, who tend to view those
like themselves—white males, for the most part—as heroes."
In the
chapter on "Classical Myths," the editors ponder whether myths are being "kept
alive" "by unreflective adults." After all, myths are prone to "strong gender
stereotyping—females are passive, males are active.... The protagonists are
devoted to a ruthless elimination of the 'other' and to a savagery that is
scarcely tolerated" in other children's literature. The genre of domestic
fiction—which includes works like Little Women, Anne of Green
Gables, and The Bobbsey Twins—"showcased white middle- or
upper-class families." But the editors are happy to report that "the genre has
come to reflect ethnic, racial and class diversity." Nor are they above offering
advice to would-be authors: "still more change would be welcome
here."
All this Sturm und Drang over children's stories is
hardly new. Ever since Socrates took on Homer by banning poets from the Just
City, philosophers have well understood that, as Shelley put it, "poets are the
unacknowledged legislators of the world." But to understand how we got here, we
need not go back so far. There have been three revolutions in modern children's
literature.
The first was instigated by John Locke. In founding a new
political and intellectual order—a liberal, tolerant regime—he believed that
reforming children's education was of the utmost importance. Notably, he advised
against reading Scripture to children, because, as he wrote in Some Thoughts
Concerning Education, the Bible was ill-suited to a "Child's capacity" and
"very inconvenient for Children." Locke's aim was to take education from the
hands of the clerisy, and to overcome its domineering and persecutory
spirit.
Contrast Locke's sensibility with that of a contemporaneous
textbook. The God-fearing New England Primer (c. 1690), included by the
Norton editors, drilled children in their ABCs thus:
A: In Adam's Fall
We sinned all
B: Heaven to find
The Bible Mind
C: Christ crucify'd
For sinners dy'd
This was an education not simply in reading and writing, but in
living and dying, one that did not condescend to the limited understandings of
children. Locke rejected all this, mischievously suggesting that children learn
their letters by playing dice. In the wake of Locke's reformation, a more
humanistic educational literature gradually blossomed. Unlike the somber New
England Primer, the stories were secular, rational, and geared towards
children. Though entertaining, these stories were meant to impart a moral
message, to help children grow into responsible adults. In this sense at least,
Locke still had something in common with the authors of the old New England
Primer.
In the late 19th century, another revolution took place,
this time marked by a wholesale shift away from moralizing. A new genre of
children's fantasy emerged, seeking only to entertain. One of its most prominent
voices was Lewis Carroll. As the editors explain, his "mockery of instructional
verse, rote learning, and moralizing school curricula helped move the genre from
eighteenth-century concerns with the instruction and correction of children
toward modern celebrations of play." This era is known as the "golden age" of
children's literature—golden precisely because it celebrated the innocence and
playfulness of childhood, and sought to free children from the grief and worry
of adults. Carroll's Crocodile, a parody, "seemed to license childhood
playfulness, fantasy, laughter, and even idleness." "The change was welcome,"
add the editors.
Alas, golden ages never last, and children's literature
was no exception. The third and last great change occurred in the 1970s, when
writers started to "push the boundaries" of material considered acceptable for
children. According to the Norton editors, "In the wake of this revolution,
writers for the young can deal with sex, violence, disease, and death—in
particular because many believe that the innocence of childhood has been
destroyed by the media and the commodification of childhood."
* * *
Indeed, it's hard nowadays to tell children's literature from adult
literature. As the editors correctly observe, this is partly because the lines
between childhood and adulthood have themselves become blurred. Locke thought
that the "tender" minds of children should be protected from the corruptions of
the adult world—and yet these are now the genre's warp and woof. "Children's
literature has also begun to resemble adult literature in subject matter," write
the editors, "using frank and provocative language to depict and discuss social
problems such as homelessness, drug addiction, abuse, and terrorism and
expanding the notion of family to include nontraditional families led by single
parents, stepparents, and gay and lesbian parents."
Thus the postmodern
adult world, in all its vulgar glory, is visited upon our children. The editors
enthusiastically endorse Jonathan Miller's 1984 picture book The Facts of
Life, which includes a "pop-up penis." Apparently, alternative families
provide especially good material for young readers today. After touting the
groundbreaking work Heather Has Two Mommies, and chiding Focus on the
Family and the Heritage Foundation for seeing it as a threat to "what they call
traditional American values," the editors assure us that "there are today no
real taboos in domestic fiction for young adults, and few in books for the
youngest readers. Family stories now tackle every painful issue
imaginable."
Indeed, they do. Fairy tales, which have always dealt with
dysfunctional families, especially wicked stepmothers, now take on a hard modern
edge by tackling perhaps the last taboo, incest. The Norton Anthology
contains ten versions of Little Red Riding Hood, beginning with Charles
Perrault's classic and ending with Francesca Lia Block's Wolf (1998).
Block, unlike Perrault, isn't satisfied with the sexual undertones and imagery
of the original; her heroine is the victim of rape at the hands of her mother's
boyfriend ("he held me under the crush of his putrid skanky body") whom she
kills with a shotgun at her grandma's house. The editors tell us that this
"story shows how a young girl can take charge of her life, while at the same
time exposing the sado-masochistic ties that exist in many dysfunctional
families."
Well, perhaps, but is this really a story for children? "Once
upon a time" used to be a gateway to a land that was inviting precisely because
it was timeless, like the stories it introduced and their ageless lessons about
the human condition. But this invitation must now apparently read, "Once upon a
time when women were powerless and exploited and white male hegemony ruled the
world, and when the sky was dark...."
In a strange way, completely
unappreciated by the anthology's editors, we have returned to the pre-Lockean
age of children's literature. Locke wished to scrub stories clean of horrific
images and premonitions of death—not because he was a naïf or a utopian, but
because he believed it possible to build a more rational, humane world. The
Norton editors break with him on this central issue. They do not believe in the
possibility of a more rational world, or even, it would seem, in childhood
itself. And so they have more in common with the New England Primer
than they dare to admit. They, too, are obsessed with death and the apocalypse,
only they don't believe in redemption.