Catching Them Young: Political ideas in children's fiction, Part 2Strips, Enid Blyton, kolonialisme en het bovennatuurlijke (godsdienst, fantasie) in engelstalige jeugdlektuur worden op heldere wijze belicht, vanuit het idee dat kinderen op alle mogelijke manieren geïndoctrineerd worden via de boeken die zij lezen |
Contents
More EEK than TEEHEE | 1 |
Enid Blyton and Her Sunny Stories | 56 |
Fiction Follows the Flag | 74 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adults advertisement Africa amongst Aslan attitudes battle Beano Biggles Blyton British Bunyan called Captain Hurricane cartoon comics children's fiction children's literature Christian church civilisation colonial comic books comic strip course CRUZ The University death Dick Dolittle element empire Enid Blyton evil fact Fall into Adventure fantasy fight Five Fall Garner girls gives group of comics Haggard Henty ideology Indian interesting issue Jungle jungle books killing kind King Kipling later Leila Berg literature live London look Lord magazines matter Narnia obvious Oompa-Loompas Patrick Howarth picture political public school published question racism reader religion religious Robinson Crusoe Sanders savage says Scream Inn seems seen Shardik social Society Stalky & Co story Superman tells theme there's things told tract tradition University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA usually W.E. Johns Wallace Whizzer and Chips who's women Wonka writers young