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Young Adult Literature, Libraries, and Conservative Activism

Young Adult Literature, Libraries, and Conservative Activism cover

Young Adult Literature, Libraries, and Conservative Activism

Description

This incisive study analyzes young adult (YA) literature as a cultural phenomenon, explaining why this explosion of books written for and marketed to teen readers has important consequences for how we understand reading in America. As visible and volatile shorthand for competing views of teen reading, YA literature has become a lightning rod for a variety of aesthetic, pedagogical, and popular literature controversies.

Noted scholar Loretta Gaffney not only examines how YA literature is defended and critiqued within the context of rapid cultural and technological changes, but also highlights how struggles about teen reading matter to—and matter in—the future of librarianship and education.

The workbridges divides between literary criticism, professional practices, canon building, literature appreciation, genre classifications and recommendations, standard histories, and commentary. It will be useful in YA literature course settings in Library and Information Science, Education, and English departments. It will also be of interest to those who study right wing culture and movements in media studies, cultural studies, American studies, sociology, political science, and history. It is of additional interest to those who study print culture, publishing and the book, histories of teenagers, and research on teen reading. Finally, it will offer those interested in teenagers, literature, libraries, technology, and politics a fresh way to look at book challenges and controversies over YA literature.

Table of Contents

Chapter One: How to Read a Young Adult Novel: An Introduction

What Is Young Adult Literature?
Golden Age or Dark Age? Histories of Young Adult Literature
Early and Foundational Young Adult Novels
YA Goes to School: Young Adult Literature in the Academy
The Politics of Reading: How to Read YA (And This Book)

Chapter Two: Constructing the Teenaged Reader

“These Kids Today”: Myths and Stereotypes about Contemporary Teenagers
Reading in Theory
Reading in Decline or Reading on the Rise?
Print and Digital Literacies
The Politics of Research: Teens and Reading in the Cultural Crossfire

Chapter Three: Tending the Fair Garden: Canon Formation and Aesthetic Approaches to Young Adult Literature

Youth Services Librarianship and Literary Aesthetics
Defending the Canon: Realism v. Fantasy
The Rise of YA Librarianship: Defending Teens' Freedom to Read


Chapter Four: Bibliotherapy and the Problem Novel: Pedagogical Approaches to YA Literature

The Rise of the New Realism
The Problem with Probl

Product details

Published Feb 01 2017
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 1
ISBN 9798881871963
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Series Beta Phi Mu Scholars Series
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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