Written for Children
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"This is a brief, readable account of English prose fiction for children from its beginning main streams of development and includes the 'Courtesy Books' of a later age, and the work of the remarkable John Newbery in the eighteenth century. The nineteenth century which began with Mrs. Sherwood's The Fairchild Family - 'designed to strike the fear of hellfire into every child's soul' - later saw the works of Lewis Carroll, Stevenson, Henty and the development of the school story from 'Tom Brown'
Our Review
This concise yet comprehensive survey traces the evolution of English children's literature from its earliest origins through pivotal transformations. Townsend guides readers from the didactic "Courtesy Books" of earlier eras to John Newbery's groundbreaking eighteenth-century publications that first recognized childhood as a distinct phase. The narrative vividly captures the nineteenth century's dramatic shift from moralistic tales like Mrs. Sherwood's fear-driven The Fairchild Family to the imaginative liberation found in Lewis Carroll's Wonderland, demonstrating how cultural attitudes toward childhood fundamentally reshaped literary content.
What distinguishes this historical overview is its ability to balance scholarly depth with engaging accessibility, making complex literary developments understandable without oversimplification. The analysis particularly illuminates how the emergence of genres like the school story through works such as Tom Brown's Schooldays reflected changing educational philosophies and social values. Readers interested in literary history, education, or children's media will gain valuable perspective on how contemporary children's literature emerged from centuries of ideological struggle between instruction and entertainment, morality and imagination.
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