This group connects researchers interested in building digital archives, studying children’s books with digital tools and developing digital applications for children’s literature in education
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Vanessa Joosen deposited Age in David Almond’s Oeuvre: A Multi-Method Approach to Studying Age and the Life Course in Children’s Literature in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 month, 2 weeks ago
In recent decades, age studies has started to emerge as a new approach to study children’s literature. This book builds on that scholarship but also significantly extends it by exploring age in various aspects of children’s literature: the age of the author, the characters, the writing style, the intended readership and the real reader. Mor…[Read more]
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Mike Rifino started the topic Due Date Extended! (6/15) CFP: Liberatory Legacy of bell hooks JITP Themed Issue in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 3 months, 4 weeks ago
The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy
Themed Issue 23: The Liberatory Legacy of bell hooks: Pedagogies and Praxes that Heal and Disrupt
Issue Editors:
Nikki Fragala Barnes, University of Central Florida
Summer L. Hamilton, Pennsylvania State University
Asma Neblett, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Kush Patel, Manipal Academy of…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen deposited Encounters of a Dreamy Kind: Dreams as Spaces for Intergenerational Play and Healing in Dutch Children’s Literature in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 4 months, 1 week ago
Dreams can function in children’s books as a means to connect young characters and
older figures in the story. This article presents three methods to study intergenerational
encounters in and through dreams in a selection of contemporary Dutch children’s
books. First, a digital analysis of a corpus of 81 books shows that the older the cha…[Read more] -
Vanessa Joosen deposited Connecting Childhood Studies, Age Studies, and Children’s Literature Studies: John Wall’s Concept of Childism and Anne Fine’s The Granny Project in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 4 months, 1 week ago
Diverging definitions and uses of concepts such as “ageism,” “aetonormativity,” “adultism,” and “childism” point at the relative separateness of the fields of childhood studies, age studies, and children’s literature studies, while also highlighting their shared interest in questions of age, prejudice, and agency. This article uses John Wall’s…[Read more]
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Lindsey Geybels deposited Shuffling Softly, Sighing Deeply: A Digital Inquiry into Representations of Older Men and Women in Literature for Different Ages in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 7 months ago
When gender is brought into concerns about older people, the emphasis often lies on stereotypes connected to older women, and few comparative studies have been conducted pertaining to the representation of the intersection between older age and gender in fiction. This article argues that not only children’s literature, traditionally considered t…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen started the topic CFP LIon and the Unicorn – Special issue on children’s literature and DH in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 8 months, 1 week ago
Call for PapersChildren’s Literature and Digital HumanitiesSpecial issue The Lion and the Unicorn In recent years, Digital Humanities has had a big impact on the field of literary studies as a whole and digital approaches are now also making their way to children’s literature studies. Moreover, various large digitisation projects have made mor…[Read more]
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Andreia Nunes started the topic Article from John Stephens in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 10 months, 3 weeks ago
Hi everyone!
Could anybody help me get John Stephens’ article: Gender, Genre and Children’s Literature?
Stephens, John. Signal; Stroud, Glos. Vol. 79, (Jan 1, 1996): 17.
It is available for download through ProQuest but unfortunately my university doesn’t have access to it ;(
Gender, Genre and Children’s Literature – ProQuest
Thank you in ad…[Read more]
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Mike Rifino started the topic Join the JITP Collective! Apply by Nov 30th in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 11 months ago
Call for Participation
The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy seeks new members to join our Editorial Collective. We invite applications from graduate students, scholars, and practitioners in all fields who critically and creatively engage with digital technology in their teaching, learning, and research. We will be appointing bo…[Read more]
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Andreia Nunes replied to the topic Suggestions on programs to analyse data from children’s books in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year ago
Hi Meredith!
Thank you so much 🙂 I have chosen some categories I would like to analyze like physical characteristics (hair, beard), adjectives, professions, household tasks, etc. to see how male/female characters are represented. But they are still very open – to see what I will find in the books. Some will repeat itself so I use numbers as…[Read more]
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Meredith Hale replied to the topic Suggestions on programs to analyse data from children’s books in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year ago
This sounds like a great project. Good programs depend a little on how your data is formatted, but I’d recommend seeing if OpenRefine might be a good fit for your project – https://openrefine.org/download.html
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Andreia Nunes started the topic Suggestions on programs to analyse data from children’s books in the discussion
Children's literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year ago
Hi everyone! My name is Andreia Nunes and I am doing my Phd in sociology, investigating about gender stereotypes in Portuguese contemporary children’s literature. I’ve been working on my analysis grid and my categories and I have around 100 books to analyse! I am wondering about the best program to use to insert data! Anyone working on something…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen deposited Constructing Age in Children’s Literature: A Digital Approach to Guus Kuijer’s Oeuvre in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year, 7 months ago
This article applies digital methods to gain more insight into the role of age in the oeuvre of the Dutch author Guus Kuijer. The concept of “age” is relevant to Kuijer’s oeuvre in various ways: he is a crosswriter who has authored fiction for children, adolescents, and adults, and intergenerational relationships are a recurrent thematic featu…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen deposited A style for every age: A stylometric inquiry into crosswriters for children, adolescents and adults in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year, 8 months ago
In the field of children’s literature studies, much attention has been devoted to investigating differences between children’s and adult literature. Works of crosswriters, authors who write for both readerships in different works, are an excellent source for this research. This article applies stylometry, the computational method of analysing sty…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen deposited Writing when Young: Bart Moeyaert as a Young Adult Author in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 1 year, 9 months ago
Duet met valse noten (1983) started as a diary when Bart Moeyaert was twelve years old. After it was disclosed by an older brother, Moeyaert rewrote it during his teenage years as a novel about first love. This article studies the genesis and early reception of Moeyaert’s novel to reflect on young authors who fictionalize real-life experiences a…[Read more]
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Vanessa Joosen deposited Rewriting the Grandmother’s Story: Old Age in “Little Red Riding Hood” and Gillian Cross’ Wolf in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 2 months ago
Abstract: Feminist perspectives have strongly influenced the fairy-tale rewritings of the past decades, but the intersection of gender with other identity markers deserves more attention. This article applies the conclusions of Sylvia Henneberg’s critical examination of age and gender in fairy tales to Gillian Cross’s Wolf (1990),
an awa…[Read more] -
Lindsey Geybels deposited Putting the Sorting Hat on J.K. Rowling’s Reader: A digital inquiry into the age of the implied readership of the Harry Potter series in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 4 months ago
Compared to the large body of research into gender, race and class in children’s literature, there has been little awareness of the social construction of age in this discourse. Analysing age in contemporary fiction for young readers gives insight in how present-day society models (people of) different ages, and given the decisive role that b…[Read more]
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Lindsey Geybels deposited Over (de) grenzen: Op zoek naar de lezer in het oeuvre van Joke van Leeuwen in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 4 months ago
In the field of children’s literature studies much attention has been devoted to analysing differences between children’s and adult literature. Works by crosswriters, authors who write for both readerships in different works, are an excellent source for this research. This article adds to the debate by building upon previous studies which have use…[Read more]
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Justin Wigard deposited Now THIS is Podracing! Ludic and Narrative Friction in Star Wars Episode 1: Racer in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 4 months ago
Abstract: In Star Wars Episode I: Racer (1999), players choose between several different podracers (including Anakin Skywalker and Sebulba), and compete in racing tournaments on several planets. While the game currently holds the Guinness record as the best-selling sci-fi racing game of all time and was re-released for Nintendo Switch in 2020,…[Read more]
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Julie Blake commented on the doc Digital Archives in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 10 months ago
The New York Public Library’s Digital Collection, The Black Experience in Children’s Books: Selections from Augusta Baker’s Bibliographies, is here. Be warned: though all of these books represent black lives, many of them are deeply racist. If you want guidance on this, I’m documenting them and can…[Read more]
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Anna Cermakova commented on the doc Digital Archives in the group
Children’s literature and digital humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years, 10 months ago
19th century English Children’s literature corpus (ChiLit), available at: https://clic.bham.ac.uk
For more info about the corpus see two following blog posts: https://blog.bham.ac.uk/clic-dickens/2017/11/28/the-glare-19th-century-childrens-literature-corpus-in-clic/ and…[Read more] - Load More