Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Katharine Capshaw’s new study—intersecting photography, children’s literature, and the civil rights movement—is a rich and strikingly original addition to the growing scholarship on African American childhood. Many scholars will appreciate and be indebted to this important work." —Gerald Early, Washington University in St. Louis

"Capshaw’s analysis and contextualization of the works in question break entirely new ground, offering original ways of thinking about how the photographic book operated as a medium particularly suited to African-American authors, child readers, and messages about civil rights." —Julia Mickenberg, University of Texas at Austin

"This is an important and engaging book that offers one of the few extended discussions of depictions of black childhood. "—International Review of Children’s Literature

"Civil Rights Childhood will no doubt be an influential text in our understanding of the visual representations of black childhood now and in our future."—MELUS

"A fascinating, well-conceived and empirically rich study."—Visual Studies

"To read Capshaw is. . . to receive a lesson on the cultural importance and responsibility of literary scholarship. Civil Rights Childhood not only advances our scholarly understanding of the politics of childhood, but also enables readers to better contextualize so many of the images and injustices we continue to encounter."—International Research Society for Children’s Literature

"Deeply researched and engagingly written."—Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth

"Civil Rights Childhood is notable for its steadfast and vocal commitment to its political project. Capshaw’s continual engagement with the real implications of the work she analyzes and also of her own would make this book a useful one to use in the classroom."—CAA Reviews

"Impeccably researched. Capshaw does some incredibly impressive literary recovery work, shedding light on texts completely unfamiliar to many contemporary scholars of either children’s literature or African American studies."—Children’s Literature Association Quarterly



Table of Contents
Contents

Introduction

1. Friendship, Sympathy, Social Change
2. Pictures and Nonfiction: Conduct and Coffee Tables
3. Today: Framing Freedom in Mississippi
4. The Black Arts Movement: Childhood as Liberatory Process
5. Blurring the Childhood Image: Representations of the Civil Rights Narrative

Conclusion: A Text for Trayvon

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index


Civil Rights Childhood

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    £31.80

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 4 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback by Katharine Capshaw

    10 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Civil Rights Childhood by Katharine Capshaw

      Publisher: MP - University Of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 12/1/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780816694051, 978-0816694051
      ISBN10: 0816694052

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Katharine Capshaw’s new study—intersecting photography, children’s literature, and the civil rights movement—is a rich and strikingly original addition to the growing scholarship on African American childhood. Many scholars will appreciate and be indebted to this important work." —Gerald Early, Washington University in St. Louis

      "Capshaw’s analysis and contextualization of the works in question break entirely new ground, offering original ways of thinking about how the photographic book operated as a medium particularly suited to African-American authors, child readers, and messages about civil rights." —Julia Mickenberg, University of Texas at Austin

      "This is an important and engaging book that offers one of the few extended discussions of depictions of black childhood. "—International Review of Children’s Literature

      "Civil Rights Childhood will no doubt be an influential text in our understanding of the visual representations of black childhood now and in our future."—MELUS

      "A fascinating, well-conceived and empirically rich study."—Visual Studies

      "To read Capshaw is. . . to receive a lesson on the cultural importance and responsibility of literary scholarship. Civil Rights Childhood not only advances our scholarly understanding of the politics of childhood, but also enables readers to better contextualize so many of the images and injustices we continue to encounter."—International Research Society for Children’s Literature

      "Deeply researched and engagingly written."—Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth

      "Civil Rights Childhood is notable for its steadfast and vocal commitment to its political project. Capshaw’s continual engagement with the real implications of the work she analyzes and also of her own would make this book a useful one to use in the classroom."—CAA Reviews

      "Impeccably researched. Capshaw does some incredibly impressive literary recovery work, shedding light on texts completely unfamiliar to many contemporary scholars of either children’s literature or African American studies."—Children’s Literature Association Quarterly



      Table of Contents
      Contents

      Introduction

      1. Friendship, Sympathy, Social Change
      2. Pictures and Nonfiction: Conduct and Coffee Tables
      3. Today: Framing Freedom in Mississippi
      4. The Black Arts Movement: Childhood as Liberatory Process
      5. Blurring the Childhood Image: Representations of the Civil Rights Narrative

      Conclusion: A Text for Trayvon

      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index


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