Alice to the lighthouse : children's books and radical experiments in art

Author(s)

    • Dusinberre, Juliet

Bibliographic Information

Alice to the lighthouse : children's books and radical experiments in art

Juliet Dusinberre

Macmillan , St. Martin's Press, 1999

[New ed.]

  • : pbk
  • : us

Available at  / 22 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Previous ed. 1987

Bibliography: p. 324-335

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Alice to the Lighthouse is the first and only full-length study of the relation between children's literature and writing for adults. Lewis Carroll's Alice books created a revolution in writing for and about children which had repercussions not only for subsequent children's writers - such as Stevenson, Kipling, Nesbit, Frances Hodgson Burnett and Mark Twain - but for Virginia Woolf and her generation. Virginia Woolf's celebration of writing as play rather than preaching is the twin of the Post-Impressionist art championed by Roger Fry. Dusinberre connects books for children in the late nineteenth century with developments in education and psychology, all of which feed into the modernism of the early twentieth century.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Children's Books, Childhood and Modernism The Voice of the Author Virginia Woolf and the Irreverent Generation Death The Medium of Art Making Space for a Child The Literary and the Literal Notes Select Bibliography Index

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top