Literary reading is a team game: exercices with Carroll and Carle.
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Abstract
This paper will focus on the issue of training future literary reading mediators or promoters. It
will propose a practical exercise on playing with intertextuality with the aid of two children
literature classics and masterpieces—The Adventures of Alice in Wonderland by Lewis
Carroll (1865) and The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle (1969). This exercise is not
designed to be a pedagogical or didactic tool used with children (that could alternatively be
done with the same corpora), but it is designed to focus on issues of literary studies and
contemporary culture. The aim of this practical exercise with future reading promoters is to
enable graduate students or trainees to be able to recognize that literary reading can be a team
game. However, before arriving at the agan stage, where the rules get simplified and
attainable by young readers, hard and solitary work of the mediator is required. The rules of
this solitary game of preparing the reading of classical texts are not always evident. On the
other hand, the reason why literary reading could be (and perhaps should be) defined as a new
team game in our contemporary and globalized world derives directly from the fact that we
now live in a world where mass culture is definitely installed. We should be pragmatic on
evaluating the conditions of communication between people (not only young adults or
children) and we should look the way people read the signs on everyday life and consequently
behave in contemporary society, and then apply the same rules or procedures to introduce old
players such as the classical books in the game. We are talking about adult mediators and
native digital readers. In the contemporary democratic social context, cultural producers and
consumers are two very important elements (as the book itself) of the literary polissystem. So,
teaching literature is more than ever to be aware that the literary reader meaning of a text does
not reside only in the text and in its solitary relationship with the quiet and comfortably
installed reader. Meaning is produced by the reader in relation both to the text in question and
to the complex network of texts invoked in the reading process and plural connections
provided by the world of a new media environment.
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Pereira, Cláudia S., «Literary Reading is a team game: exercices with Carroll and Carle», The Child and The Book International Conference 2016 “Children’s Literature and Play”, 18-20 maio, University of Wroclaw, Polónia.