Description
Picturebooks, understood as a series of meaningful text-picture relations, are increasingly acknowledged as an autonomous sub-genre of children's literature. Being highly complex aesthetic products, their use is deeply embedded in specific situations of joint attention between a caregiver and a child. This volume focuses on the question of what children may learn from looking at picturebooks, whether printed in a book format, created in a digital format, or self-produced by educationalists and researchers.
Interest in the relationship between cognitive processes and children's literature is growing rapidly, and in this book, theoretical frameworks such as cognitive linguistics, cognitive narratology, cognitive poetics, and cognitive psychology, have been applied to the analysis of children's literature. Chapters gather empirical research from the fields of literary studies, linguistics and cognitive psychology together for the first time to build a cohesive understanding of how picturebooks assist learning and development.
International contributions explore:
- language acquisition
- the child's cognitive development
- emotional development
- literary acquisition ("literary literacy")
- visual literacy.
Divided into three parts considering symbol-based learning, co-constructed learning, and learning language skills, this cross-disciplinary volume will appeal to researchers, students and professionals engaged in children's literature and literacy studies, as well as those from the fields of cognitive and developmental psychology, linguistics, and education.
About the Author
Bettina Kummerling-Meibauer is Professor in the German Department at the University of Tubingen, Germany. Joerg Meibauer is Chair for German Linguistics at the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany. Kerstin Nachtigaller is a member of the Emergentist Semantics Group at the Center of Excellence Cognitive Interaction Technology, Bielefeld University, Germany. Katharina J. Rohlfing is Head of the Emergentist Semantics Group at the Center of Excellence Cognitive Interaction Technology, Bielefeld University, Germany.
Reviews
"With chapter contributors coming from fields such as developmental psychology, optometry and vision science, early-years education, clinical linguistics, international children's literature, multimodal literacy, linguistics, philosophy, and preschool education - this scholarly work is a compendium of interdisciplinary approaches which looks into how children acquire language as well as develop cognitive, emotional, and emergent literacy skills through picturebooks... The editors have done a remarkable job of structuring each chapter in such a way that the core connecting thread of how children learn from picturebooks runs through this academic text that features empirical investigations conducted or reviewed extensively but hay chapter contributors." - Rhoda Myra Garces-Bascal, Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature
Book Information
ISBN 9781138294417
Author Bettina Kummerling-Meibauer
Format Paperback
Page Count 246
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight(grams) 453g