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E-raamat: Experiencing Environment and Place through Children's Literature

Edited by , Edited by (Monash University, Victoria, Australia), Edited by
  • Formaat: 232 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317979463
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  • Formaat: 232 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317979463

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Recent scholarship on children’s literature displays a wide variety of interests in classic and contemporary children’s books. While environmental and ecological concerns have led to an interest in ‘ecocriticism’, as yet there is little on the significance of the ecological imagination and experience to both the authors and readers – young and old – of these texts. This edited collection brings together a set of original international research-based chapters to explore the role of children’s literature in learning about environments and places, with a focus on how children’s literature may inform and enrich our imagination, experiences and responses to environmental challenges and injustice. Contributions from Australia, Canada, USA and UK explore the diverse ways in which children’s literature can provide what are arguably some of the first and possibly most formative engagements that some children might have with ‘nature’. Chapters examine classic and new storybooks, mythic tales, and image-based and/or written texts read at home, in school and in the field. Contributors focus on exploring how children’s literature mediates and informs our imagination and understandings of diverse environments and places, and how it might open our eyes and lives to other presences, understandings and priorities through stories, their telling and re-telling, and their analysis.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Environmental Education Research.

Notes on Contributors vii
Foreword: Experiencing environment and place through children's literature 1(12)
Amy Cutter-Mackenzie
Phillip G. Payne
Alan Reid
1 Through green eyes: complex visual culture and post-literacy
13(14)
Sidney I. Dobrin
2 Re-searching and re-storying the complex and complicated relationship of biophilia and bibliophilia
27(16)
Heesoon Bai
Daniela Elza
Peter Kovacs
Serenna Romanycia
3 Remarkable-tracking, experiential education of the ecological imagination
43(16)
Phillip G. Payne
4 Children's literature as a springboard to place-based embodied learning
59(16)
Linda Wason-Ellam
5 The stories are the people and the land: three educators respond to environmental teachings in Indigenous children's literature
75(20)
Lisa Korteweg
Ismel Gonzalez
Jojo Guillet
6 What's there, what if, what then, and what can we do? An immersive and embodied experience of environment and place through children's literature
95(20)
Geraldine Burke
Amy Cutter-Mackenzie
7 Exploring instructional strategies to develop prospective elementary teachers' children's literature book evaluation skills for science, ecology and environmental education
115(16)
J. William Hug
8 Developing environmental agency and engagement through young people's fiction
131(14)
Stephen Bigger
Jean Webb
9 The Lord of the Rings - a mythos applicable in unsustainable times?
145(18)
Alun Morgan
10 Reading The Lorax, orienting in potentiality
163(14)
Amy Sloane
Afterword: Openings for researching environment and place in children's literature: ecologies, potentials, realities and challenges 177(34)
Alan Reid
Phillip G. Payne
Amy Cutter-Mackenzie
Index 211
Amy Cutter-Mackenzie is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education, Monash University, Australia. Her research interests focus on children's and teachers' thinking and experiences in environmental education in a range of contexts and spaces (including schools, garden spaces, teacher education, higher education, outdoor education, children's literature, research and early years settings). She is the editor of the Australian Journal of Environmental Education.



Phillip Payne joined Monash University, Australia, in early 2006 as the Course Director of Sport and Outdoor Recreation and Research Leader of the Movement, Environment and Community (MEC) group. He is an international editorial board member for Environmental Education Research, Journal of Environmental Education, and Australian Journal of Environmental Education. He has published and presented approximately 100 academic papers.





Alan Reid is a Senior Lecturer in Education and member of the Centre for Research in Education and the Environment, University of Bath, UK. He coordinates doctoral programmes in research methods in education, and teaches on undergraduate and graduate programmes in environmental education, technologies and learning, and research methods. His research interests focus on teachers thinking and practice in environmental education, and policy-related, methodological and philosophical issues in environmental education theory, research and practice. Recent co-edited publications include Participation and Learning: Perspectives on Education and the environment, health and sustainability (2008) and Researching education and the environment: retrospect and prospect (2008).