Sunday, October 28, 2012

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

          Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a children's novel that shows the experiences a family living in Mississippi in 1933.  The young family owns their own land, much to their neighbor's dissatisfaction.  There are no racist subtleties in this book, it is out in the open and up front.  The night riders cruse the dirt roads of Mississippi terrorizing the African American citizens.  Mr. Granger seems to be the instigator and fuel for the racist environment that the community has to deal with.  While the Wallace's seem to be the ignorant red necks that always taking things one step too far.  The terror that the African American people have to live with during this time in United States history is unacceptable.
          How does a child understand the adult content that this book is saturated with?  This book was upsetting to me.  Throughout this book I was in a constant state of fear, worry, and anxiety.  I was nervous and upset as if I was a member of the Logan family.  This book is very well written, it is just too advanced and graphic for a young child.  There are many violent and graphic scenes.  It becomes gruesome toward the end.  I don't believe that this is children's literature.  Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is more suited for middle and high school students.  Everyone should have to read this book at least once in their lives, just not when they are six years old. 

Monday, October 22, 2012

The Birchbark House

     The Birchbark House was an interesting book to read.  It paralleled Little House on the Prairie in a few ways.   This story is told from the perspective of the Native Americans and allows the readers to see their point of view of manifest destiny.  It shows the struggles they went through on "the prairie," the ways they stayed alive, and how they cultivated the land.  Apparently, Mrs. Scott was wrong when she implied that they just walked around and didn't farm.  The Native Americans were doing what wealthy people do now, going from their summer home to their winter home and vice versa. 
     The Birchbark House is the story about a young girl named Omakayas and how she deals with life, especially when a stranger infects them with small pox's.  As I read this book I kept thinking of the differences between Omakayas and Laura, from Little House on the Prairie.  The responsibilities and chores that Omakayas has are so much more than anything Laura had.  Laura never had to protect the corn from crows or help tan a moose hide.  I also noticed that the women in The Birchbark House did a lot of the work Pa would have done on the prairie.  They were the ones that got the summer and winter house ready, not Deydey.  Deydey was actually absent most of the year as Omakayas points out.  
     I was disappointed when they got small pox's.  I felt betrayed for them and even more upset when the baby died from it.  I don't believe Laura would have been able to handle an out break of small pox's.  She was not able to handle malaria alone.  I found Omakayas bravery fantastic and interesting that she was rescued as an infant by Old Tallow.  This story was a lot sadder than Little House on the Prairie.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Little House on the Prairie

          While reading this book I found many of the same issues with it that Michael Dorris did, while he was reading it to his young daughter.  The first thing that struck me was how open and out right Ma was with her racist views of the Indians.  Also that the neighbors seemed to have the same view points.  Looking past this, the next thing that struck me was that one of the main characters had the authors first and middle name as her own.  Granted, if I were to write a novel I would want to live on forever also and might grace a character with my name.  
          But, it is the foreshadowing in the beginning that is most important.  Ma was continually implying that the Indians were something to fear and not interact with.  There is a mood instilled that the Ingalls's shouldn't settle on the prairie.  It seems to be a bad idea and the novel proves this to be true.  Their neighbor almost dies, helping them dig a well, everyone in the family catches malaria, they are robbed at least two times by local tribes, the prairie catches fire, and they are eventually forced to leave.  These events prove that settling on Indian Territory and not a few miles down, was the wrong decision.  
          This novel also reminded me of the rules Locke had for children.  It seemed that Laura was always disobeying her parents and enforcing the idea that her actions were what "not to do."  While her sister Mary, followed their parents orders/directions and was the "good daughter."  This seemed to be a way to educate children and teach them manners without them noticing.  A final thought that I had while reading Little House on the Prairie was why didn't the pack of fifty wolves try to eat the family?  The wolves had at least two opportunities to attack them and never once tried.  Is it a symbol for the way the Indian's never attacked them?               

Monday, October 8, 2012

Kim and The Children's Empire



          Rudyard Kipling’s Kim is a wonderful book about a young boy and his adventures throughout India.  The novel takes place during the nineteenth century.  Being that this was the time period chosen, there is a lot of hidden and underline references to the colonization of India by Great Britain.  Much of the novel involves Britain’s attempt to mold Kim into a perfect spy.  His first set of training begins with his friend, Mahbub, who is a horse trader.  He began testing Kim when he was young, unknown to Kim, as a telegraph boy.  Kim meets a lama and begins traveling India with him; they are in search of a river that washes away all your sins.        
          On this quest, the two run into the British army and Kim is taken in because, he is “one of them,” despite his orphan past and the upbringing he received by a local Indian woman.  Britain takes advantage of this and sends Kim to school.  He escapes and runs to Mahbub.  Betraying him, he returns him to the British.  Throughout the novel Kim is taught by many experts on how to act, speak, and behave in any situation, he also learns the art of disguise.  
          Lerer brought up an interesting point in Children’s Literature: a Reader’s History from Aesop to Harry Potter, “The key to institutional success is how one “cuts up”: behaves, cuts a figure, acts and speaks (the idiom seems to have emerged from school and sporting slang in the mid-nineteenth century).”  Throughout the book Kim is being taught these lessons and actually putting them to use.  He quickly learns the rhetoric needed when he comes in contact with another “charmed one,” and his quick thinking enables his to disguise a man using curry powder.  Although this is thought of as an adventure novel for boys I think it could also be considered a bildungsroman.

Monday, October 1, 2012

The Romantic Child



We began with fairy tales, touched on the education of children based on Locke’s beliefs, and now are venturing into the educational styles of “The Romantic Child.”  Mary Wollstonecraft believed that beauty fades and that every young girl needs to be educated because, they must be able to have a meaningful conversation.  Priscilla Wakefield’s “From Mental Improvement; or, The Beauty and Wonders of Nature and Art, conveyed in a series of Instructive Conversations (1794),” was extremely boring.  It was like reading from a dictionary for four pages.  I realize that the point is to teach children the proper way to have a conversation and use social topics of the time.  “The Purple Jar,” by Maria Edgeworth teaches a valuable lesson.  If the young girl had listened to her mother and had been a smart consumer, comparing the two products, she would have been happy.  Unfortunately, she is miserable because, of her impulse buy.  This is the departure from fairy tales and into a more realistic life lesson.  William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience (1789-94) title pages show images of life and death.  The early edition has a mother and two children sitting under a tree reading.  The later edition has the mother lying down and the children in morning positions around her.  His poetry is just as intense.  In “The Little Black Boy,” the small child is comforting an assumed white child.  He was raised to expect hardship and is now stronger than the other child.  Much of Blake’s poetry has a religious theme.  God is found in almost every poem, especially “The Chimney Sweeper.”  The religious child comforts the miserable one, who is named Tom.  In his sleep, Tom finds comfort and peace by accepting God.  The chimney sweepers are children.  This is for many reasons, the main ones are that children are small, can be pushed around, and don’t eat as much as grown men.