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Article

Children's literature and theology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries

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Citation

Blair K (2016) Children's literature and theology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Literature and Theology, 30 (2), pp. 125-130. https://doi.org/10.1093/litthe/frw019

Abstract
First paragraph: In 2002, Peter Hunt, one of the world¡¯s leading scholars of children¡¯s literature, argued in a conference talk: [R]eligion of all kinds has been virtually silenced in mainstream children¡¯s literature, and this has left both a philosophical and a sociological void, perhaps uneasily filled by myth and fantasy. Secondly, religion has actually taken on strong negative connotations. Yet while strongly asserting that children¡¯s literature had been overtaken by secularism, Hunt also noted that the contemporary debates over Philip Pullman¡¯s His Dark Materials series (1995-2000), in tandem with controversies over the banning of J. K. Rowling¡¯s Harry Potter books (1997-2007) on religious grounds in parts of the U. S., suggested that ¡®religion and children¡¯s books have once more become intertwined, in a highly paradoxical way.¡¯ii In the decade since Hunt¡¯s talk appeared in print, this has arguably become ever clearer to scholars of children¡¯s literature. Although we can agree with the editors of two previous special journal issues on children¡¯s literature and religion that mainstream children¡¯s literature ¡®has long since evolved away from its religious roots¡¯ in the Christian didacticism of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and that ¡®overt and even covert advocacy of religion (particularly Christianity) in secular children¡¯s literature has become increasingly suspect and subject to censorship¡¯, there also seems to be a general consensus that the late twentieth and twenty-first century has witnessed a notable revival of interest in religious and theological themes in children¡¯s literature.

Journal
Literature and Theology: Volume 30, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2016
Publication date online26/05/2016
Date accepted by journal26/05/2016
URL
ISSN0269-1205
eISSN1477-4623

People (1)

Professor Kirstie Blair

Professor Kirstie Blair

Dean of Faculty of Arts and Humanities, AH Management and Support Team

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