CCBC-Net Archives

[CCBC-Net] Minders and The Establishment

From: leonardsma at aol.com <leonardsma>
Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2008 14:36:51 -0400

 I think all of MINDERS is an answer to this question, if only a partial answer. Americans have always been sure their children should read,? and less sure WHAT they should read. The debate goes on. If more adults see the interest and value of comics now than did a generation ago, maybe it's because they're less willing to discount their own remembered childhood enjoyment of comics for the sake of an abstraction. That seems like a very healthy cultural impulse to me, and so a hopeful sign for the future.



 



Leonard S. Marcus

54 Willow Street, #2A

Brooklyn, New York 11201



tel 718 596-1897

e-mail leonardsma at aol.com

web www.leonardmarcus.com




-----Original Message-----

From: Brian & Jen, Meg & Ethan &lt;brewcheese at gmail.com&gt;

To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu

Sent: Wed, 30 Jul 2008 2:10 pm

Subject: [CCBC-Net] Minders and The Establishment



  
    I was interested at the number of times the establishment - publishers, editors, librarians, etc - seemed to thumb their collective noses at reading material they didn't feel was quality literature. Three examples come to mind: the rise of comic book popularity, Little Golden Books, and the president's (Eisenhower?) love of westerns. Only one person showed a curiosity at what made comic books so popular with kids, while others only gave them passing consideration and a quick dismissal. Golden Books got books into many homes that normally wouldn't have them by offering them cheaply and in a comfortable place for moms. I remember begging my mom to get me a book from that spinning, wire rack while waiting in line for a prescription at the drug store on days I stayed home sick from school. When the president gave glowing statement of Children's Book Week (?) organizers thanked him profusely, used the statement boldly, then laughed at his love of westerns qu
 ietly behind his back. Now we have graduate classes on using comics in the classroom and a exploding market for graphic novels. Cheap books are available in Kohl's and Menards and Best Buy (of all places!). And the president's wife is a former librarian with a new picture book of her own. Mr. Marcus, any theories on this change? My apologies for not remembering some names and details. I read it a month ago and my copy has long been returned to the library. (I'd better also apologize for returning it late.) Brian _______________________________________________ CCBC-Net mailing list CCBC-Net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu Visit this link to read archives or to unsubscribe... http://ccbc.education.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/ccbc-net
   
Received on Wed 30 Jul 2008 01:36:51 PM CDT