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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Matthew GrenbyORCiD
This article subjects to new scrutiny some of the long-standing assumptions about the relationship between children and chapbooks. Three questions in particular are considered. First, whether children really formed one of the primary audiences for chapbooks in early modern Britain. Second, whether, in the later eighteenth century, modern children’s literature developed out of, and in reaction to, the chapbook tradition. And third, how the chapbook designed especially for children, a new form that emerged in the early nineteenth century, relates to both the earlier chapbook tradition and to the new children’s literature that had by then begun to flourish. The article concludes that the arrival of a more respectable and differentiated children’s literature did not kill off the older chapbook tradition, but rather helped to sustain it. Although they retained a traditional chapbook format, these new ‘children’s chapbooks’ were a response to the increasing segmentation of print culture and a growing demand amongst the non-affluent for books especially for the young.
Author(s): Grenby MO
Publication type: Article
Publication status: Published
Journal: The Library: The Transactions of the Bibliographical Society
Year: 2007
Volume: 8
Issue: 3
Pages: 277-303
Date deposited: 18/04/2008
ISSN (print): 0024-2160
ISSN (electronic): 1744-8581
Publisher: Oxford University
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/library/8.3.277
DOI: 10.1093/library/8.3.277
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