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Serialization, Commercialization and the Children's Classics - (Bloomsbury Perspectives on Children's Literature) by Amy Webster (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- An exploration of the serialization of children's classics by contemporary publishers, this book digs into the impact of the practice and provides new ways of reading the corpus of British children's literature from the 20th century.
- About the Author: Amy Webster is Senior Lecturer in Education Studies, Bishop Grosseteste University, UK.
- 232 Pages
- Literary Criticism, European
- Series Name: Bloomsbury Perspectives on Children's Literature
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About the Book
"An exploration of the serialization of children's classics by contemporary publishers, this book examines the impact of the practice to provide new ways of reading 20th-century British children's literature. Combining distant and close reading of series from Ladybird, Longman, Puffin and Walker Illustrated, it reveals how publishers' composition, abridgement and repackaging of individual works into series has transformed classic fiction into commercial products and complicated the concept of what is even considered a classic. Demonstrating how modern classics series are marked by variation, instability and a reductive homogeneity, Webster puts forward a critical approach for classifying classics in the face of contemporary publishing practices"--Book Synopsis
An exploration of the serialization of children's classics by contemporary publishers, this book digs into the impact of the practice and provides new ways of reading the corpus of British children's literature from the 20th century. Amy Webster demonstrates how publishers select texts for their series, which texts they omit, which outliers are sometimes included and how a core group of works from the golden age of children's literature emerged. The text also examines how texts are abridged and transformed from publisher to publisher through close readings of The Wind in the Willows and Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; and how the repackaging of works within a series highlight issues and choices tied to key paratextual elements. Analysing data through distant reading and close reading of series from Ladybird, Longman, Puffin and Walker Illustrated editions, this book sheds light on how modern classics series are marked by variation and instability but also a reductive homogeneity.
Through her use of quantitative and text-focused research, Webster reveals how commercial motivations have created a gulf between the canonical concepts of the classic and how the term functions as a marketing tool in British children's publishing. With notions of what counts as a classic compromised and complicated, this book leads the call for a critical approach towards both the term 'classic' and to reading children's classics that acknowledges how they are tied to the commercial enterprises of the children's book business.About the Author
Amy Webster is Senior Lecturer in Education Studies, Bishop Grosseteste University, UK. She is part of the University's Literature and Literacies research unit and co-edits the university's newsletter on children's literature. Her articles and essays have been published in The SAGE Encyclopaedia of Children and Childhood Studies and FEAST and has presented many papers across the UK and Europe. She completed an MPhil and PhD at the Centre for Research in Children's Literature at the University of Cambridge.