Reading for learning : cognitive approaches to children's literature
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Reading for learning : cognitive approaches to children's literature
(Children's literature, culture, and cognition, 3)
John Benjamins Publishing Company, c2014
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [229]-244) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
How does reading fiction affect young people? How can they transfer fictional experience into real life? Why do they care about fictional characters? How does fiction enhance young people's sense of self-hood? Supported by cognitive psychology and brain research, this ground-breaking book is the first study of young readers' cognitive and emotional engagement with fiction. It explores how fiction stimulates perception, attention, imagination and other cognitive activity, and opens radically new ways of thinking about literature for young readers. Examining a wide range of texts for a young audience, from picturebooks to young adult novels, the combination of cognitive criticism and children's literature theory also offers significant insights for literary studies beyond the scope of children's fiction. An important milestone in cognitive criticism, the book provides convincing evidence that reading fiction is indispensable for young people's intellectual, emotional and social maturation.
Table of Contents
- 1. Acknowledgments
- 2. What is cognitive criticism and what's in it for children's literature research?
- 3. Chapter 1. Knowledge of the world
- 4. Chapter 2. Three possible worlds
- 5. Chapter 3. Knowledge of other people
- 6. Chapter 4. Creative mind-reading
- 7. Chapter 5. Knowledge of self
- 8. Chapter 6. Memory of the present
- 9. Chapter 7. Ethical knowledge
- 10. Chapter 8. The ethics of address and the ethics of response
- 11. How to read a children's book and why
- 12. Bibliography
- 13. Index
by "Nielsen BookData"