Children’s Ecoliterature and the New Nature Study.

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  • Author(s): op de Beeck, Nathalie
  • Source:
    Children's Literature in Education. Mar2018, Vol. 49 Issue 1, p73-85. 13p.
  • Additional Information
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      This essay explores how nineteenth-century nature study principles inform a twenty-first century New Nature Study movement, and gives examples of a trend toward nature writing in recent picture books. The pedagogical principles of nineteenth-century nature study, ascendant at the turn of the twentieth century and implicit in interwar children’s literature, yielded to a model founded on Cold War competition rather than environmental stewardship. In mid-century narratives for children, technological progress prevailed. In the 1990s, the ideals of the first nature study movement reemerged in a call for meaningful conservation to sustain future generations. Like the original nature study, the New Nature Study arises from anxieties about industrial development, habitat loss and extinction, and hazards to childhood itself. The New Nature Study treats children as agents for change and citizens being denied their full human rights when their land, soil, water, and lives are bought and sold. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
    • Abstract:
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