Edited by Sidney I. Dobrin and Kenneth Byron Kidd
Paper - 9780814330289
Price: $29.95s
Subjects: Children's Studies
Series: Landscapes of Childhood Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Sidney I. Dobrin is associate professor of English and Director of Writing Programs at University of Florida.
Kenneth B. Kidd is Assistant Professor of English and associate director of the Center for the Study of Children's Literature at the University of Florida. He is the author of Making American Boys: Boyology and the Feral Tale (University of Minnesota Press, 2004).
"Wild Things: Children’s Culture and Ecocritism explores and analyzes those materials that contribute to the ongoing environmental education of children. The essays are well organized, grouped according to period and genre, and cover literature that ranges from the nineteenth century to the present. Because the essays in Wild Things are so engaging and diverse, it would be virtually impossible for anyone to pick up this book and not find something of interest. The collection is both thought-provoking and enjoyable, like the children’s literature it explores. Not only does Wild Things stress the importance of early childhood environmental education, but it also suggests that the sympathy that we as a society are trying to instill in out children is in fact already there to some degree."
— H-Net Reviews
“Spanning the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries, from Peter Pan and Charlotte’s Web to Disney World and Saturday morning television, Dobrin and Kidd’s Wild Things is a cogent and useful examination of children’s literature and culture in the contexts of ecocriticsm, ecology, and environmentalism. Its scope and substance will appeal to scholars and teachers at all levels as well as the general public.”
— Anne K. Phillips, Kansas State University
“Children’s literature is never innocent, for at serious play are ideologies, discourses, and politics vying to shape the future. This inaugural collection of ecocritical essays on children’s literature and media fruitfully enlarges the purview of ecocriticism and, in places, challenges its very norms.”
— Cheryll Glotfelty, co-editor of The Ecocriticism Reader