Children's literature and the avant-garde /
This chapter addresses what an avant-garde for children might look like, and what it might do. It is called "Surrealism for Children: Paradoxes and Possibilities" because the very notion of an avant-garde for children strikes the author as both paradoxical and not, and as both possible and...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2015]
|
Colección: | Children's literature, culture, and cognition ;
v. 5. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Children's Literature and the Avant-Garde; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Table of figures; Introduction; What is Avant-garde?; Avant-garde and children's books; Aims of this volume; Selected bibliography; John Ruskin and the mutual influences of children's literature and the avant-garde; The condition of childhood; Influence of improved printing for children; Children's literature and culture as Purveyors of the Grotesque; Political caricaturists as children's book illustrators; Roots of the picturebook in total design; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources.
- Einar Nerman
- From the picturebook page to the avant-garde stageCaricature artist, painter and performer; Crow's Dream
- An animal revolution; Darkness and light; From stage designs to picturebooks; Mass culture, children's literature and the avant-garde; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources; Sándor Bortnyik and an inter-war Hungarian children's book; Introduction; Publication variations; The book; Sándor Bortnyik: Biography and activity; Bortnyik in Germany; Return to Hungary; Hungarian modernism and its origins; Modernism and its relationship to graphic design.
- Potty és Pötty: Illustrations and textBortnyik and children's books; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources; The forgotten history of avant-garde publishing for children in early twentieth-century Britain; Recovering Britain's lost avant-garde legacy; Surrealism and British children's fiction: Jean de Bosschère The City Curious (1920); Childhood recaptured: Child art and children's literature in Britain; The Émigré effect: Adapting European techniques to British tastes; Avant-garde echoes.
- Experimental landscapes: Avant-garde arts meet the English landscapeAcknowledgement; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources; The square as regal infant; Introduction; Kazimir Malevich and the avant-garde infantile; Shape, Geometry, and the Infantile; El Lissitzky and the avant-garde infantile; Vladimir Lebedev and the avant-garde infantile; Conclusion; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources; The 1929 Amsterdam exhibition of early Soviet children's picturebooks; Historical background; Publishing children's books in the early Soviet Union; Early Soviet children's books.
- Illustrators of Soviet children's booksEarly exhibitions of Soviet children's books; The organization of the 1929 Amsterdam exhibition; The reconstruction of the exhibition; Representativeness; The reception; Conclusions; References; Primary sources; Secondary sources; Appendix; Rupture. ideological, aesthetic, and educational transformations in Danish picturebooks around 1933; A new society, a new child, a new picturebook; The new world presented in Jørgens Hjul; The education of the socialist citizen; Aesthetic appeal in text and image.