"The
Storied World - From Storytelling to Fiction" Lecture
From
The Riverside Anthology of Children's Literature/Saltman
"The Oral Tradition" (pp225-661)
Storytelling
The
chief means of recording history, ideas, emotion
Stories recounted the hunt, the chase, the capture, the kill
Stories tell what happened, to whom, and where
In addition stories capture
- events
- character,
perceptions of others
- behavior
- premonitions
- taboos/tabus
- beliefs
- emotion
- hopes,
fears, courage, cowardice
- a
search for help from the unknown
Stories
give form to
- religion
- faith
- laws
- wit,
humor
Stories
offer a direct approach to children
because
they capture the imagination and gain their interest
Stories
align children with the past
Stories help children build worlds, set scenes and backdrops
with their inner eye, create characters' faces
Storytellers' art teaches children to appreciate and enjoy
the sound of language
t
he variability of language
Very
young children, before being capable of reading, can learn
beyond
their years by listening to storytellers
For
storytellers, the oral tradition was the way to impart truth
- Fables
- Folktales
- Epics
- Romances
- Myths
- Legends
Storytellers,
in realism or fantasy, create illusions.
"Art," says Picasso, "is a lie that lets us
see the truth."
The
Storied World - From Storytelling to Fiction
From The Riverside Anthology of Children's Literature/Saltman
"Encounters and Adventure: Realistic and Historic Fiction"
Realistic
fiction began with the Puritans
Preparing children for death was a common goal
Common too were accounts of children dying slowly in joyous
anticipation of going to heaven ("Good Godly Books")
The realistic children's novel developed in the 18th Century
Many of the first novels were school stories
There were more school stories for boys than for girls (behavior)
The Governess, or the Little Academy by Sara Fielding-one
of the earliest of the school tales
Thomas Hughes' Tom Brown's School Days (1857)
George Emmet's Young Tom's Schooldays (1870)
Many of these stories featured good student behavior
Warnings of what happens to students doing bad things
Manners and morality featured
Eric, or Little by Little by Rev. F. Farrar (1831-1903)
is about a boy who "goes to the bad"
St. Winfred's or The World of School also by Farrar
(later boys made a mockery of these strangely compelling works)
P.G. Wodehouse, the inventor of "Jeeves" began career
with a series
of school novels -The Captain, and The Head of
Kay's (1905)
Rags
to riches novels included:
The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes by Oliver Goldsmith
which
features an orphaned girl who rises to fortune against all odds
The Ragged Dick series by Horatio Alger(1832-1902)
is the 19th Century American counterpart of the rags to riches
saga
Alger set the pattern for a whole series stressing the rewards
of morality and hard work.
In the 1960's a New Realism emerged featuring controversial
themes subjects and issues
Romantic
adventure stories include:
Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island (1883)and
Kidnapped(1886)
Howard Pyle's Men of Iron
Captain Frederick Mayyat's (1792-1894) Wreck of the Pacific
R.M. Ballentyne's Coral Island, Hudson Bay, Everyday Life
in theWilds of America (1848)
Anna Sewell's Black Beauty
G.A. Henty1832-1902 Redskin and Cowboy a tale of the Western
Plains
The Storied World - From Storytelling to Fiction
From The Riverside Anthology of Children's Literature/Saltman
"Encounters and Adventure: Realistic and Historic Fiction"
Adventure
stories for girls often took the form of a series
Some of these series had a number of authors
The series adventures often had elements of mystery
Some had continuous themes, story lines
Most had a dedicated reader group
Some main characters had traditional careers
Bobbsey Twins
Judy Jordon
Six Little Bankers
Carter Girls
Kay Tracey
Melody Lane
Peggy Lane
Grace Harlowe
Molly Brown
Pollyanna
Betsy Tracy
Judy Bolton thrillers
Nancy Drew by Carolyn Keene is still very popular
Cherry Ames by Helen Wells and Julie Tatham is a series
of 27 books
Chronicles stories of a dedicated quick-witted nurse, Cherry
Ames, who becomes involved in numerous mysteries
LIVING
IN OTHER WORLDS- LANDSCAPE
Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe set a pattern for later
works
Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell
Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George
These works concentrate on the protagonist's relationship with
the landscape
Also
providing a striking sense of the natural or physical world
are works such as Heidi by Johanna Spyri bringing to
the forefront life in the Swiss Alps, and The Secret Garden
set in a Victorian English garden in Yorkshire
THE
CHILD ALONE (Physically)
In these stories the child is able to live alone or with wild
animals
Adults are absent for the most part
Children can
- test
their own strength
- be
responsible
- face
danger and lonliness
- be
resourceful
- be
self reliant
- have
a unique freedom
- take
risks
Tom
Sawyer is the classic example of the assertion of freedom
Island of the Dolphins and Julie of the Wolves
THE
CHILD ALONE (Psychologically)
Children undergo trials
Generally there is a maturation process
They overcome fear as they attempt to form new families
to make new friends, or meet new challenges
The Secret Garden, The Planet of Junior Brown,
Where the Lilies Bloom, Homecoming
FAMILY
ADVENTURES
In these stories children work in teams or groups
Together the children are capable and competent
Louisa May Alcott's Little Women, Mildred Taylor's
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, and Lois Lowry's
Anastasia Krupnik, Nesbit's The Railway Children,
and Konigsburg's From the Mixed up Files of Mrs. Basil E.
Frankweiler.
In
many of these stories the resolution is not one of action but
one of awareness.
THE
CHILD IN SOCIETY
The conflict here is between the child and the group or state
Harriet in Harriet the Spy by Fitzhugh is alienated
but she is also a spirited writer who learns hard lessons.
Jesse experiences a more serious conflict and is transformed
in The Slave Dancer by Paula Fox; and, as does Jesse,
the protagonist in The Chocolate War in this coming
of age novel struggles with conscience.

lectures
l assignments/projects
l readings/novels
l modules
tests/exams l
syllabus
l
links l
resources l
writing tips l
email instructor
ssu/library l
sandra's
learning paradise l
ukiah
home page l
course home page
|