编委会对形成性书籍和其他媒体的反思

IF 0.3 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Ken Parille, Kenneth B. Kidd, J. Mechling, Victoria Cann, Edward W. Morris
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阅读人物、人物和财产在这篇文章中,我回顾了我在童年和青少年时期读过的超级英雄漫画书,注意到当我收集和阅读以“银影侠”为主角的故事时,我慢慢地开始意识到,这个角色的特征,在他出现的第一部漫画中确立的,似乎在后来出版的漫画中发生了变化。在寻找这些变化的解释时,我开始关注漫画的演职员表,意识到不同的作家和艺术家对角色的理解不同,通常没有义务保持一致的方法。我最终意识到,漫画的演职员表有时会歪曲每个故事创作者所投入的劳动。这个漫长的过程让我在写作和教学中都产生了一种持续的兴趣,那就是通过理解故事产生的环境,我们对故事及其人物的理解可以丰富起来。心灵之书回顾我们童年时最喜欢的书,能告诉我们关于过去和现在的自己什么呢?这篇关于这个问题的简短思考首先考虑了阅读回忆录和重读实验,然后回顾了作者自己童年时期最喜欢的几本书,推测它们的吸引力和对身份巩固的潜在意义。我在佛罗里达州的迈阿密海滩出生并长大。1956年夏天,11岁的我翻开了一本新的《美国童子军手册》,期待着那年秋天从幼童军转到男童军。在那些书页中,我发现了一个深深打动我的幻想,一个与一群男孩朋友在荒野中徒步旅行和露营的浪漫幻想。这种幻想深深植根于男孩的小说和《手册》之类的书中,迎合了男孩逃避成年人监视和控制的愿望,在荒野环境中塑造一个“迷失的男孩”社区,理想的是建立牢固的男性友谊。“后来我再也没有像十二岁时那样的朋友了。天哪,有人知道吗?这篇文章是对1986年的电影《伴我同行》的反思,借鉴了其中的一些主题,并将它们与我自己作为一个成长于20世纪90年代的女孩的童年联系起来。我回想起在我重新观看这部电影时,我是如何被男孩们的阶级地位与我自己通过教育过渡和解放的经历相呼应而震惊的。我也在思考看到男孩哭泣和害怕的重要性——我觉得学校里的男孩被禁止在公共场合表演。天才少年:阅读的思考这篇文章基于对童年文本的反思和分析,理清了阅读、智力和男子气概之间的关系。作者认为,虽然阅读小说似乎能促进同理心,但专门为男孩写的书可能包含有关男子气概的有害信息。分析显示,受欢迎的《大脑伟大》系列强化了白人、残疾歧视和男性优越感的观念。书中对务实的“天才”和少年时代的救世主比喻的强调强化了这些信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial Board Reflections on Formative Books and Other Media
Reading Characters, People, and PropertiesIn this piece, I reflect on superhero comic books I read in my childhood and adolescence, noting that as I collected and read stories featuring the character known as the Silver Surfer, I slowly began to realize that the character’s traits, as established in the first comic in which he appeared, seemed to change in comics published later. In searching for explanations for these changes, I began to pay attention to a comic’s credits, recognizing that different writers and artists understood the character in different ways and often felt no obligation to maintain a consistent approach. I eventually realized that a comic’s credits sometimes misrepresented the labor invested by each of the story’s creators. This long process led to an ongoing interest—in both my writing and teaching—in the ways that our interpretation of a story and its characters can be enriched by understanding the conditions under which it was produced.Books of the HeartWhat might reflecting on favorite books from our childhood tell us about our past and current selves? This short meditation on that question first considers reading memoirs and experiments in rereading, and then reviews some favorite books from the author’s own childhood, speculating on their appeal and potential significance for identity consolidation.The Fantasy of the Boy Scout HandbookBorn and raised in Miami Beach, Florida, I opened my new Boy Scouts of America Handbook for Boys in the summer of 1956, at age 11, in anticipation of moving from the Cub Scouts to the Boy Scouts that fall. I found in those pages a fantasy that moved me deeply, a romantic fantasy of hiking and camping in the wilderness with a band of boy buddies. That fantasy has deep roots in fiction for boys and in books like the Handbook, appealing to the boy’s desire to escape the surveillance and control of adults and to fashion a community of “lost boys” in a wilderness setting ideal for strong male bonding in friendship.“I Never Had Any Friends Later on Like the Ones I Had When I Was Twelve. Jesus, Does Anyone?”: Reflections on Learning about Boyhood through Stand by MeThis piece offers reflections on the 1986 movie Stand by Me, drawing on some of the main themes and contextualizing them in relation to my own childhood as a girl growing up in the 1990s. I reflect on how in my rewatch of the movie, I was struck by the ways that the class positions of the boys echoed my own experiences of transition and liberation through education. I also reflect on the significance of seeing boys cry and be scared—feelings that the boys at my school were policed out of performing in public.Boy Genius: Reflections on Reading The Great BrainBased on reflection and analysis of a formative childhood text, this essay disentangles the relationship between reading, intelligence, and masculinity. The author argues that although reading fiction appears to encourage empathy, books written specifically for boys may contain detrimental messages about masculinity. The analysis reveals that the popular Great Brain series reinforces notions of whiteness, ableism, and masculine superiority. These messages are reinforced by the books’ emphasis on pragmatic “genius” and the savior trope in boyhood.
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来源期刊
Boyhood Studies-An Interdisciplinary Journal
Boyhood Studies-An Interdisciplinary Journal SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
14.30%
发文量
12
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