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BOOK REVIEWS: The Scream! Does Children’s Literature Have to Be Scary?
By Diane Ravitch
Welcome to Lizard Motel: Children, Stories, and the Mystery of Making Things Up by BARBARA FEINBERG
Welcome to Lizard Motel: Children, Stories,
and the Mystery of Making Things Up
By Barbara Feinberg
Beacon Press, 2004. $23, 265 pages.
Reviewed by Diane Ravitch
Barbara Feinberg contends that most of the
young adult novels that teachers assign to teenagers are dreary,
depressing, and didactic. Rather than encouraging impressionable
students to read more, these so-called problem novels turn young
people into reluctant readers. Furthermore, she holds that the
writers’ workshops that have spread like kudzu through
American elementary schools, promoted by Lucy Calkins of Teachers
College, Columbia University, deaden children’s creativity.
Both claims are akin to bomb throwing, since
these practices are high orthodoxy in the world of professional
pedagogy. What is her claim to authority? She is not a
card-carrying member of the professoriate, nor does she claim to
have a doctorate. She apparently is not worried about winning
tenure or finding new friends among professors of pedagogy. She
offers up some footnotes to document her reading in the
professional literature, but she has no social science data and
does not claim to be an expert.
Lacking the medals and ribbons that certify
professional expertise, she relies instead on demonstrations of her
experience and insight. Her book is a memoir that displays her love
of language and children and her understanding of how children
think. She writes as a mother, but also as the founder of a
creative-writing program for children. She listens to her
12-year-old son and his friends as they discuss the novels that their
teachers have told them to read over the summer. The boys don’t
like them. They seem, in fact, to hate them.
The books that her son, Alex, and his friends
are compelled to read are highly regarded by teachers and
professors of education. Many come decorated with Newbery medals
and endorsements by the American Library Association. They are
books known in the field of children’s literature as Young
Adult (YA) literature. All are highly realistic, written in a
confessional tone, usually in the first-person voice of an angry or
alienated teenager. The protagonist deals with traumatic
experiences: murder, suicide, the death of a parent or friend,
incest, sexual abuse, rape, drugs, abortion, kidnapping,
abandonment. Friendly or protective adults are virtually
nonexistent; the main character’s mother, writes Feinberg, is dead, missing, or
nonfunctional. Children in these novels almost never play. Often they
feel guilty for whatever catastrophe befalls them. The books are
uniformly humorless, earnest, and depressing. Their message, to the
extent that they have one: the world is a nasty and brutish place, and
you can depend only on yourself.
What is missing from YA books, says Feinberg,
is any recognition of the role that imagination and fantasy play in
children’s ways of experiencing life. Instead, the books seem
dedicated to shocking children, destroying their fantasies, and
giving them a mean dose of reality. One of the children that
Feinberg knows said of these books, “They give me a headache
in my stomach.” It is as though the authors, the publishers,
the teachers, and the professors of education share a bizarre
consensus that ordinary children need to be shaken out of their
complacency, stripped of their innocence, and frightened by the
horrors that the world has in store for them at any moment.
No More Trees in Brooklyn
Feinberg divines similar attitudes in the
writers’ workshops, introduced to her daughter’s
elementary school by an expert from the Lucy Calkins Writing
Project at Teachers College. Under the expert’s guidance,
seven-year-old Claira’s class is soon writing and revising
their memoirs. The children are taught to record and revise their
experiences; no fantasy is permitted, no fiction, no non-sequiturs.
Feinberg recoils at what she describes as profound, if mannerly,
thought control, in which imagination and fantasy are ruled out of
order. She complains: “This is not a natural way that children see. One must have
traveled to the end of something to be able to have a satisfying
backward perspective. This whole enterprise is something adults have
imposed. And why? Why is my generation hell-bent on making our children
wake from the dream of their childhoods?”
In her own approach to writing and reading,
Feinberg is clearly attuned to children’s love of making
things up, imagining that animals can talk, turning empty boxes
into special places for stories that flow from children’s
daydreams and flights of fancy. As a child, she loved A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Her son and his friends love the Harry Potter books.
These kinds of novels are unacceptable to the academic proponents
of YA literature. They are too removed from the horrors of everyday
life. The YA crowd prefers books and activities that encourage
self-reflection, self-absorption, that is, narcissism.
The advocates of problem novels would no doubt
sneer at Feinberg’s right to criticize these novels. After
all, what are her credentials? A mother and director of a
story-writing program for children. But we may well ask, what are
their credentials for foisting these novels of adolescent
alienation on an entire generation of American children? They
believe that children need to read books that upset them, but on
what do they base this claim? There is no social science evidence
that children need to cry or be frightened by the books they read.
Some of the professoriate embrace the bizarre idea of
bibliotherapy, believing that children will feel better about
themselves if they read about a child with similar problems (for
instance, the child of an alcoholic parent should read about the
child of an alcoholic parent). However, these claims are based on
assumptions, not evidence. In fact, professors of children’s
literature and classroom teachers are not qualified to act as
therapists for children with social and emotional problems. Nor is
there any evidence that reading a book is an appropriate treatment
for a deep-seated problem.
What Feinberg nicely exposes is that the
entire field of children’s literature specialists has bought
a flawed bill of goods and has sold it to the nation’s
teachers. They have persuaded themselves that their job is not to
promote excellent literature, but to promote depressing problem
novels. In doing so, they seem to be turning young people away from
literature in droves. Last year the National Endowment for the Arts
issued a report called “Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary
Reading in America,” which found that the proportion of young
adults between the ages of 18 and 24 who read literature has
declined sharply in the past two decades. Perhaps the professors
should ask themselves whether their prescriptions have contributed
to this unfortunate trend.
Diane Ravitch is research professor of
education at New York University and a member of the Koret Task
Force at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
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