Seth Lerer’s Children’s Literature: A Reader’s History from Aesop to Harry Potter

Posted: January 26, 2009 in adult literature, book trailer, children's and young adult literature, my writing, opera, other things, Seth Lerer, snippy comments, Terry Pratchett

Lerer, Seth.  Children’s Literature: A Reader’s History from Aesop to Harry Potter.  Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2008.

This book, it seems, has just been named as a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle 2008 awards for criticism.  According to its website, the National Book Critics Circle consists of “more than 900 active book reviewers who are interested in honoring quality writing.”  If so, they’ve made a surprising choice with this one.  Lerer’s book is, I think, quite dreadful–very bad scholarship indeed.  As someone who’s devoted some decades to taking children’s literature criticism seriously, reading it made me very, very angry.  To me, honouring it in this way can only suggest a depressing lack of knowledge of the nature and history of children’s literature on the part of these supposedly quality-minded critics.  Let me try to say why without too much ire.

Lerer describes the book as “a reader’s history of children’s literature: a study of the figurations of the reading child from antiquity to the present; but a report as well, on my own life of reading and the critical interpretations that my literary scholarship brings to the texts of childhood”  (1-2).  In other words, the reader whose history is being explored is an amalgam of a generalized “reading child” and one very specific reading scholar.  On the face of it, these readers seem unlikely to have all that much in common.  It’s not surprising that the book sometimes fluctuates erratically between them and sometimes uneasily combines them, so that it’s hard to tell where the child’s reading leaves off and Lerer’s ingenious but highly subjective theorizing begins.

Part of the problem is Lerer’s lack of clarity about just who the child reader he;s concerned with is–what he means by “the figurations of the reading child.”  He claims his book is “a history of reception” (2).  But except for Lerer himself and his own son (once or twice), this so-called history of “the reading child” offers almost no reports of how any actual child readers received or responded to the texts he discusses   Instead, Lerer focuses on describing his readings of texts themselves in terms of what they suggest to him about who their readers were or ought to have been.

Lerer claims that “the study of children’s literature is cultural studies” (9) because it draws on “literary, socio-historical, and economic methods of analysis” (9).  I think that’s true–and certainly much children’s literature criticism of the last few decades has made us all increasingly aware of just how very true it is.  But Lerer’s book offers nothing obviously economic in its methodology and little that a cultural studies scholar would recognize as socio-historical: no ideological analysis of class or race, no ethnographic information. Perhaps most significantly, Lerer never engages in the critique that features centrally in cultural studies–the effort to be aware of what texts might be, for good or more often for ill, inviting readers to take for granted.  Lerer describes how various texts confirm what I take to be gender stereotypes without any apparent awareness of them being stereotypes–as if they were true, as if all girls or all boys shared gender-specfic characteristics.  He also speaks of early Greek readers as generalized “children” without seeming to notice they are all male–indeed, never comments on the fact that the intended child readers of all the texts he discusses across thousands of years of history were exclusively male; and when books for girls do start to exist, he isolates them in the ghetto of a separate chapter, safely away from the history of books for “children.”  Furthermore, he describes ancient Greek children as in the care of slaves in a way that blots out the possibility that some children back then might actually have been slaves, or had slaves for parents.

This is not to say that Lerer avoids comment on how texts relate to their time and culture.  “Modern children’s literature remains an Edwardian phenomenon” (253), he asserts in a typical comment, and he claims that twentieth century American children’s literature is “nothing less than a literature of winners” (274).  But he offers very little in the way of historical or ethnographic evidence to support these astonishing conclusions.  He just puts them out there as and then acts from that point on as if they were true.

The book is filled with similarly vast, similarly unsupported generalizations.  “Slavery is central to the history of children’s literature,” (19) Lerer claims without evidence–and then doesn’t refer to the idea again.  Or again, “All children’s literature recalls an unrecoverable past, a lost age before adulthood.” (83-4).  All?   Every single bit of it?  And if it always does that, does it do it for child readers, too, and if so, what age earlier than childhood are they recalling?  Or again, “The job of children’s literature is to make sense of things” (107).  So much for nonsense verse.

Childhood, meanwhile, is as generalizable as its literature iis for Lerer.  It “is a time of exploration, an arena of adventure.  Every shipping box becomes a canoe or a spaceship” (150).  So third-world youngsters who actually live in shipping boxes and have never encountered a canoe in life or in books don’t count as real children?  Or again, “Nothing delights a child so much as tools.  But nothing delights a boy so much as new words for those tools” (154).  So much for boys like I once was who can take tools or, preferably, leave them, along with their high-falutin’ names.  Meanwhile, Montgomery’s character Anne of Green Gables is “a lesson in the ways a pictorial and dramatic imagination shapes the lives of female children” (236)–all female children always, apparently.  Lerer is surprisingly assured that children are unaffected by history and culture, alike in all times and places, and that boys and girls are inherently quite different from each other in ways that never change across time.

These surely incorrect assumptions seem to underlie Lerer’s decisions about what texts to discuss.  To begin with, he has a very generous sense of what counts as children’s literature.  In early chapters about Greece, Rome, and the middle ages, periods in which, as far as we now know, no literature specifically identified as being intended for children actually existed, he assumes that texts with qualities like those found after children’s literature did come into existence must be children’s literature also–an assumption necessarily based on the ongoing similarity of children and adult ideas about childhood across history.  For instance, he claims just about any didactic text as a text for children, presumably because people in need of learning things must have been young, an assumption the history I’m aware of (and indeed, the people I now know) don’t support.  He also asserts that the medieval play Mankind must have been intended for a young audience because its imagery “fills the play with what could only be an adolescent’s imagination” (67)–as if older people didn’t sometimes like testicle jokes also.

On the other hand, Lerer’s focus narrows sharply as he describes the eras when writing specifically intended for children does come onto existence.   While he claims that one of his goals “is to realign what has become a largely Anglophone focus for children’s literary study” (9), he discusses few texts in languages other than English and never discusses texts written anywhere outside of Europe or America, nor even many European texts beyond British ones. Furthermore, his children’s literature includes none of the didactic texts by writers like Edgeworth and Barbauld that figured prominently in the early nineteenth century; none of huge outpouring of religion-oriented texts in the Victorian period and after; no Nancy Drew or Hardy boys, no Babysitters Club or Goosebumps, indeed, none of the many series books that have characterized popular writing for children in our own century; no science fiction or teen romance; no comic books or Golden Books or Disney books and only a few very picture books; no books for babies or informational books for children of any age; none of the late twentieth century outpouring of books by and about African or Hispanic Americans, no books “for young adults” in general.  There is also no mention of a long list of important children’s writers, from Edgeworth through Charlotte Yonge, Mrs. Molesworth and George MacDonald to Beverley Cleary, Wanda Gag, Philippa Pearce, E.L. Konigsburg, William Mayne, Robert Cormier, Alan Garner, Virginia Hamilton, and R.L. Stine.

What Lerer actually does focus his attention on are well-known texts that might be found in the homes of literary-minded parents without much scholarly expertise in children’s literature.  While these books are certainly varied, they tend to be more like each other than like the kinds of undiscussed books I’ve listed above–and perhaps they are so because they accord in various ways with the tastes of contemporary literary-minded parents, something that might not be true of a text by Maria Edgeworth or R.L. Stine.  The focus on them seems to allow Lerer his many generalizations in a way that a wider and more accurate history wouldn’t.

That Lerer’s history of children’s literature is mostly a history of the books he and many other non-specialists already know and like would be acceptable if Lerer weren’t so intent on making such vast generalizations based on such a narrow range of texts, or so focussed on making the generalizations evidence of his own ingenuity.  At one point, he frets that it’s hard to come up with “something new” (192) to say about Carroll’s Alice books–as if engendering clever new ideas, true or not, were the point of doing literary research.  Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that while he points readers to a range of scholarly studies of children’s literature in his endnotes, he often describes them inaccurately there, and rarely if ever actually refers to them in his discussions of the relevant topics.  If he actually did read all these books, he certainly didn’t let them affect his thinking very much.  He’s alweays seems to be far more interested in his own clever insights than he is in the context of existing scholarship and research.

Towards the end of the book, Lerer refers to Harry Frankfurt’s On Bullshit in order to announce the typically overconfident generalization that “the boys of much contemporary literature are artists of the game” (315).  Lerer goes on to enthuse about the “a vertiginous quality of bullshit, a thrill that the bullshitter gets of making up the details, forming a persona, raising expectations,” and he includes himself among the boys who indulge in it: “we can feel almost an ecstasy in our own imagination” (316).  In the light of this book’s wild theorizing woven out of a surprisingly limited number of texts and verifiable facts, I have to conclude that Lerer found putting it together to be a thrilling experience.  Readers in search of usefully accurate knowledge of children’s literature aren’t likely to share his ecstasy.

The most depressing thing for me is that the singling out of a book like this for special recognition by a reputable national American organization seems somehow unsurprising.  Contemporary readers–the ones who accept the truth of made-up memoirs because they tell them things the like to hear–might well prefer easy generalizations to a more carefully researched conclusion based in a more exact and less incomplete knowledge of the material.

I seem to be turning into a typical grumpy old codger scandalized by what the world’s coming to nowdays, with all these dumb young punks in charge.  I’d better stop right now.

Comments
  1. rebecca says:

    This is a great post. I learn from you even when you’re in grumpy old codger mode — and I’m in that mode pretty often myself at age 39.

  2. Eric says:

    I’m not a children’s lit person, don’t even play one on tv. But I really enjoyed this post — the specific arguments about Lerer’s book and why it doesn’t deserve a NBCC nomination are persuasive and engaging.
    Thanks.

  3. Michelle says:

    I’ve not read the book yet, but the Amazon reviews suggest that Lerer is a medievalist.

    I was interested in your comments about the relegation of girls’ books to a separate chapter. It seems to be an ongoing tendency to universalise boys’ books. Some of the Victorian authors you mention who are excluded from discussion were among the most popular children’s writers, particularly for girls. While most of the unmentioned nineteenth century authors are no longer read by children, I wonder if Lerer discusses the way in which some of the most popular texts of their time are now barely remembered. That is, does he touch on the way the canon of revered children’s books is formed, or reproduce it uncritically such that books for girls can be summed up in one chapter?

  4. pernodel says:

    As I read him, except for his insistence on inventing a children’s literature in antiquity and the middle ages,, Lerer is quite uncritical about the canon as now constituted. What has been forgotten by others now–such as those nineteenth century writers for girls–is, as far as his book reveals, unknown to him.

  5. kb says:

    If even one-tenth of what you say here is true, this book must be absolutely appalling. What strikes me is the list you offer of authors left out of Lerer’s book – no Macdonald? No Barbauld?No Konigsberg or Hamilton?

    This book seems (without having read it, and I can’t say I’m going to rush right out and get it now) to be an example of a trend I’m increasingly aware of: perfectly intelligent scholars or critics in other specialties choosing to write/publish about children’s literature, as if it isn’t a specialty already, or as if one, simply by virtue of being, say, a medievalist, is qualified to work in an entirely different area. It’s an attitude that ANYONE can do this (just like anyone can write a children’s book – how hard can it be?), and it drives me crazy.

    Incidentally, I’m quite a curmudgeon myself, horrified with these young punks running the show – and I am only 29.

  6. pernodel says:

    The habit of scholars with no knowledge of already existing children’s lit criticism presuming to write about it is not just a recent trend; books of this sort have been published regularly over at least the last thirty or so years in which i’ve been working in this field. In my book The Hidden Adult, I explore the possibility that there’s something inherent in our common attitudes towards childhood and literature for young people that led newcomers to assume they are indeed and always discovering a new found land, once that no one else has ever thought of exploring or considering before they did (134-1236).

  7. Nikki Gamble says:

    Thank you for this erudite criticism and valuable ‘heads up’.

  8. Diane Purkiss says:

    I’m sorry to say that I liked the book and reviewed it enthusiastically in the TLS because it took up a different set of issues from mainstream children’s lit crit; I thought the fact that it came from left field was bracing. Not all its ideas are good, but they are at any rate stimulating. Yes, it’s true that it didn’t seem interested in canons or in studying real children, and I agree too that it uttelry reifies the category of the child, but it did propose some ideas which were miles out of the mainstream – and as one of the mianstream, I think we’re in a rut so deep we may as well call it a trench. Must we ALWAYS write about exclusion? Must all of us always write about that? Must we ALWAYS write abotu what few of us are reading. Summer before last, when every single adult bar two or three on the child_lit list was reading Harry Potter VII, it was impossible to get a discussion going about anything else. Why then should we expect academics to go foraging among literature neglected by the very experts you cite?

    Stimulating response, though, Perry – thanks for doing it.

  9. pernodel says:

    I certainly don’t mind criticism that takes up different issues or offers new possibilities–I’ve written some of that myself, I hope. But new theories that generalize wildly based on so little knowledge of what actually has been written as children’s literature across the centuries seem both pointless and silly. I don’t see how I implied that Lerer ought to be writing about what everyone else is writing about; indeed, one of my complaints is that he does just that, basing his generalizations on widely read texts like Winnie the Pooh and Harry Potter without any apparent awareness of how many thousands of texts written across the centuries, somne of them exceedingly popular with both children and adults, are quite unlike them. I suspect therefore, that some of Lerer’s generalizations about what children’s literature always does or ought to do are “miles out the mainstream'” simply because they wouldn’t stand up under a more realistic consideration of a larger and more representative body of texts. I’d be fascinated by an argument miles out of the mainstream that actually accounted for actual facts. I just don’t think Lerer has any.

  10. librarianistaalex says:

    Thank you for this. This is my textbook for a class I’m taking… and I find it pretentiously written and narrow-minded, ignoring many staples of classic and contemporary children’s literature. I’m far from an expert in the field… but I am certainly a fan, and this book just makes me upset.

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