Illustration
1 - Radical Child
The Radical Child is a flip book, showing how young radicals are created through reading picture books that challenge conventions.
Animation
2 - The Poetic Child
The Poetic Child focuses on the poetry of children’s literature and the importance of seeing things from a child’s perspective. This frame by frame animation captures moments of beauty, sadness, and joy, as observed through a child’s eyes.
Illustration
3 - Imaginative Child
In the 1920s education reformers like Lucy Sprague Mitchell believed that children were capable of finding creativity in their everyday surroundings. The Imaginative Child shows the shift in children’s literature away from fantasy, centering on a... More
Illustration
4 - Rational Child
The Rational Child imagines children as blank slates, as written by John Locke in Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693). Early understandings of cognition allowed greater freedom in children’s literature, shifting from didactic teaching towards... More
Illustration
5 - Patriotic Child
Patriotic Child explores how children’s books can be used to develop nationalism, as in Soviet children’s literature of the 1920s-1930s.
Illustration
6 - The Sentimental Child
The Sentimental Child depicts an idealized version of childhood innocence, popularized in the Romantic era by philosophers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau - showing how adults glorify their past selves while writing children’s characters.
Illustration
7 - Brave Boys and Good Girls
Brave Boys and Good Girls highlights the contrasting treatment of boys and girls throughout the history of children’s literature - encouraging boys to support their country through medieval chivalry, and girls to tend the home in domestic tales.
Illustration
8 - The Sinful Child
The Sinful Child portrays the earliest written ideas of childhood found in children’s literature, as found in Puritan picture books from the 16th century. Holding the belief that children were born primitive, savage, and innately sinful led to... More
Illustration
9 - Citizen Child
Citizen Child considers how cultures have used children’s literature as an opportunity to change society, by creating class awareness and citizenship. Influenced by anti-bourgeois Soviet children’s books of the interwar period.
Work by
Mia November
Illustration
“Little Golden Books illustrates the storied evolution of children’s books through changing adult perceptions of childhood, demonstrating how these deceptively simple stories are never just about...” [More]