The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, February 2004. === Includes bibliographical references (leaves 61-64). === This text explores three developments pertaining to children and reading in seventeenth-century England. The author aims to show how pr...
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ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-391702019-05-02T16:28:07Z The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England Miller, Heather, 1971 Sept. 14- Jeffrey S. Ravel and Diana Henderson. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Comparative Media Studies. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Comparative Media Studies. Comparative Media Studies. Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, February 2004. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 61-64). This text explores three developments pertaining to children and reading in seventeenth-century England. The author aims to show how profoundly death was implicated in the development of thought about children's reading as well as in the emergence of a literature for children in the early modem period. The first chapter discusses the negative reaction to the growing phenomenon of children reading romances and adventures in chapbook form. Escapist literature was believed to make one forget one's mortal lot, which in turn decreased one's motivation for piety. Through a discussion of the threat chapbook romances posed to pious reading, the chapter establishes the historical context for a related development, the creation of a religious or moralizing literature that children would find compelling. In their quest for gripping settings, authors latched on to the deathbed scene for its felicitous blend of inherent theatricality and religious resonance. By early seventeenth century, a few women writers even used the pretext of deathbed advice to pen their own conduct-of-life manuals in an otherwise male-dominated marketplace. The second chapter discusses the prefatory rhetoric used by the two most successful female writers in this genre. The remarkable success of maternal deathbed advice literature suggests that books in Protestant culture absorbed the near-superstitious value of Catholic icons and relics. The genre also implies a Protestant adaptation of the Catholic veneration of the mother. Comfort for the motherless child no longer came from prayer to Mary, but through the reading (and perhaps holding of) a book of advice by a model (and dead) Protestant mother. An analysis of the prefaces enables a close reading of the self-fashioning of model mother-authors. The third and final chapter discusses the starring role of death in the first English-language children's book, A Token for Children, by James Janeway. The chapter explores the literary interest in the early deaths of ordinary children of extraordinary piety. By reference to the doctrine of predestination, the author speculates that these books had a comforting as well as a preparatory function, allowing parents and children to rehearse (through reading) a model death of a child undoubtedly bound for Heaven. By no means a comprehensive treatment of the connections between death culture and children's reading in the early modern period, the thesis is intended to indicate how pious reading functioned as a reminder of one's mortality and a spur to self-scrutiny. The "looking glass" of the text displayed idealized and heaven-bound children and parents compared to whom the reader may have felt sorely in need of increased vigilance. by Heather Miller. S.M. 2009-01-30T18:38:44Z 2009-01-30T18:38:44Z 2003 2004 Thesis http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/39170 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/39170 56794927 eng M.I.T. theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. See provided URL for inquiries about permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/39170 http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 64 leaves application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
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Comparative Media Studies. |
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Comparative Media Studies. Miller, Heather, 1971 Sept. 14- The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, February 2004. === Includes bibliographical references (leaves 61-64). === This text explores three developments pertaining to children and reading in seventeenth-century England. The author aims to show how profoundly death was implicated in the development of thought about children's reading as well as in the emergence of a literature for children in the early modem period. The first chapter discusses the negative reaction to the growing phenomenon of children reading romances and adventures in chapbook form. Escapist literature was believed to make one forget one's mortal lot, which in turn decreased one's motivation for piety. Through a discussion of the threat chapbook romances posed to pious reading, the chapter establishes the historical context for a related development, the creation of a religious or moralizing literature that children would find compelling. In their quest for gripping settings, authors latched on to the deathbed scene for its felicitous blend of inherent theatricality and religious resonance. By early seventeenth century, a few women writers even used the pretext of deathbed advice to pen their own conduct-of-life manuals in an otherwise male-dominated marketplace. The second chapter discusses the prefatory rhetoric used by the two most successful female writers in this genre. The remarkable success of maternal deathbed advice literature suggests that books in Protestant culture absorbed the near-superstitious value of Catholic icons and relics. The genre also implies a Protestant adaptation of the Catholic veneration of the mother. Comfort for the motherless child no longer came from prayer to Mary, but through the reading (and perhaps holding of) a book of advice by a model (and dead) Protestant mother. An analysis of the prefaces enables a close reading of the self-fashioning === of model mother-authors. The third and final chapter discusses the starring role of death in the first English-language children's book, A Token for Children, by James Janeway. The chapter explores the literary interest in the early deaths of ordinary children of extraordinary piety. By reference to the doctrine of predestination, the author speculates that these books had a comforting as well as a preparatory function, allowing parents and children to rehearse (through reading) a model death of a child undoubtedly bound for Heaven. By no means a comprehensive treatment of the connections between death culture and children's reading in the early modern period, the thesis is intended to indicate how pious reading functioned as a reminder of one's mortality and a spur to self-scrutiny. The "looking glass" of the text displayed idealized and heaven-bound children and parents compared to whom the reader may have felt sorely in need of increased vigilance. === by Heather Miller. === S.M. |
author2 |
Jeffrey S. Ravel and Diana Henderson. |
author_facet |
Jeffrey S. Ravel and Diana Henderson. Miller, Heather, 1971 Sept. 14- |
author |
Miller, Heather, 1971 Sept. 14- |
author_sort |
Miller, Heather, 1971 Sept. 14- |
title |
The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
title_short |
The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
title_full |
The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
title_fullStr |
The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
title_full_unstemmed |
The book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern England |
title_sort |
book as looking glass : improving works for and about children in early modern england |
publisher |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/39170 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/39170 |
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