Showing posts with label Classic Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classic Literature. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2013

FAQs: Using Fiction to Teach History and the Necessity of Poetry


When a parent or teacher decides to use literature to teach history they are faced with an interesting question. Growing up attending home school conventions where I worked with my parents and siblings answering the questions of parent educators, one of the most frequently asked questions was "All these books are factual right? There's no fiction, right?" It was a difficult question to answer and I usually answered with something like, "The majority of books used in our programs are historical accounts based on first-person narratives or by respected historical writers and biographers. Our curriculums also include some historical fiction books to make history come alive and communicate to students that history is about real people who had interesting lives. These books help your students realize that history isn't just a boring list of dusty names and dates." That usually satisfied parents and teachers and we could then move on to discussing student learning styles, or where there was a good place to grab lunch nearby.

I think that that answer is valid but I also think that there is a better reason for including historical fiction in any study of history. In Poetics by Aristotle he addresses the different types of writing and genre, poetry and prose. By Poetry one is not supposed to simply think rhyming verse but the genres of epic, lyric, tragedy, and comedy. These would include works like Homer's Iliad, Aeschylus Oedipus Rex, ancient comedies like The Birds, Shakespeare's comedies, plays, and history, basically every classic work that is on one of those often overwhelming lists of must-read titles. 

Aristotle also differentiates Poetry from History in the following way:  
It is, moreover, evident from what has been said, that it is not the function of the poet to relate what has happened, but what may happen–what is possible according to the law of probability or necessity. The poet and the historian differ not by writing in verse on in prose. The work of Herodotus [the father of history] might be put into verse, and it would still be a species of history, with meter no less than without it. The true difference is that one relates what has happened, the other what may happen. Poetry, therefore, is a more philosophical and a higher thing than history: for poetry tends to express the universal, history the particular.
What Aristotle is communicating here is that while History teaches us the whats of humanity, the names, dates, facts, events, Poetry tells us the why. It answers the questions of the soul. In this way a holistic approach to teaching the events of the past should include both History and Poetry.

For teacher and parents concerned with both intellectual and character development, including the seminal works of poetry along with contemporary literature in your study of history is essential. Focusing solely on the facts of history results in a one-dimensional understanding of the human past. It fails to provide instruction to the soul. By simply reading that the early Anglo-Saxons were plagued with invasions from the northern Vikings you understand only one aspect of that culture. By including Beowulf in your curriculum of medieval history your student benefits from a colorful account of Anglo-Saxon mores and cultural values. The inclusion of this poetic work, even though no one would argue that a deformed descendant of Cain was in fact stalking the moors of northern England, provides a more complete historical portrait of this time and place. It shows us the vulnerability of the human condition and the universality of that knowledge. It also teaches the value of courage, the pitfalls of greed, the risks of rash action.

It is much easier to include foundational works of Poetry in curriculums for older students. Junior and high school students can tackle Homer, Shakespeare, Chaucer, Aeschylus, the writings of the American founding fathers, and other such works. For younger students it's more challenging. In seeking out works that have both historical and poetic value teachers are left with fictional stories based in historical settings. While there is an abundance of such material, most of it is valueless. It's either historically inaccurate or morally blasé. Thankfully there are books that fulfill the high standard of combining historical authenticity with the poetic. Stories like To Kill a Mockingbird are included in our American history curriculums because they provide a rich and accurate portrait of what life was like in the deep American south in the mid 20th century. They bring history to life, giving our students  poetic images of what it would have felt like to be alive at that time and place in history. In doing so, To Kill a Mockingbird is also a deeply moral book, one that shapes the reader's soul.

In a study of Early American history, youngsters can read books like Pilgrim Stories and receive instruction both in events that happened in 17th century England, Holland, and America. Yes, the Pilgrims were a group of people who wished to worship God in the manner they chose and they left England in order to pursue that freedom. Those are the basic facts of the story. But in reading Pilgrim Stories a child will understand how this quest cost them greatly, how they had to leave established homes and loved ones, escaping in the darkness of night to slip away to Holland, a country where they did not speak the language, where the customs were strange, and where people wore wooden shoes! While you may not consider this to be Poetry, it is. I spent hours as a child reading Pilgrim Stories, pouring over the accounts of young pilgrims ice skating on the canals in Leiden, Holland, learning about the Dutch love for tulips, feeling sad for the hardships endured by the Pilgrims during their first winter at Plymouth. The images conveyed in this collection of stories showed me the value of hospitality, compassion, conviction, and courage. And as a youngster I also knew that the Pilgrims went to Holland before they settled in Massachusetts, something most adult Americans have never been taught. So my historical knowledge was not reduced by the inclusion of fictionalized historical stories, it was enhanced.

Now, it is important that the Poetry you include in your children's curriculum is not didactic. Even as a child I could tell the difference between a great story that made me want to be a better person and one that was written strictly for the purpose of communicating some value. A great classic like Oedipus Rex has not survived for millennia because people really feel that warnings against killing one's father and marrying one's mother are necessary. No, it has survived the test of time because it's an amazing story. It is a superb tragedy and the fact that it teaches us about the dangers of forbidden knowledge and pride are secondary to the fact that it's a poetry that captures our imaginations. This should be the criteria for which you choose the stories for your children.

Having been raised on the poetry of stories like The Courage of Sarah Noble, The Matchlock Gun, Miss Rumphius, Obadiah the Bold, The Hundred Dresses and others that engaged my imagination, I can remember feeling distinctly frustrated by a series of books that were given to me as a youngster. The Elsie Dinsmore series promised parents that these books would provide a guide to the "meaning of godly womanhood." To my young mind, these books were hopelessly boring. The transparent intent of its author was to instruct young girls in a distinctly 19th century understanding of moral character. She certainly did not care about constructing a good story. I worked my way through several volumes of the series, each time frustrated by a character who was unrelatable, a plotline that was completely flat, and characters who were lifeless. Additionally, I found Elsie's father to be creepy and overbearing. Even though I was separated by two thousand years and countless cultural boundaries, I found the young characters in The Bronze Bow much more relatable and instructional. Why? Poetry. The poetic imagination of Elizabeth Speare in creating a trio of friends in 1st century Palestine meant that I could feel the emotions of a young Jew and a Roman soldier more easily than the young American Elsie Dinsmore. From The Bronze Bow I learned what a revolutionary figure Jesus of Nazareth was, what it felt like to be a Jew living under Roman rule, and I was given a fuller picture of life in ancient times. I have read The Bronze Bow more than four times, while the Elsie Dinsmore books gathered dust.

It is with all these things in mind that we choose the books we do for each of our studies. While the Teaching Character Through Literature studies may seem like the perfect place for books concerned with "teaching a lesson" there is not one didactic title in it. There are only great stories, books that speak to our souls. And throughout our history curriculums we've endeavored to provide the best history and the best poetry available. It's the only way to provide a complete historical education.

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Friday, August 03, 2012

Introducing Youngsters to the Ancient Classics

Shakespeare, Chaucer, Homer, Virgil. All these names make the hearts of English majors like me beat a bit faster. I love reading the greats but when it comes to introducing these masters to children, my heart beats a bit faster with anxiety. Introducing classic literature to children is a bit of a balancing act. On one hand you want to challenge your children but how do you do this without overwhelming them with stories that are complex, intricate, and dense? Can you encourage a child to fall in love with advanced stories without overwhelming them with too much detail? That problem is one of the challenges of using a literature approach to teaching. But, the good news is that there are extremely talented authors who have brilliantly adapted some of the most famous stories from these authors and made them approachable for young children. While some may decry the use of adaptations, I have found that they are wonderful tools in that these simplified versions allow you to introduce classic works to students at a young age. This creates a curiosity about the original and prepares them to read the original works. It breeds a familiarity with plot and character that enables them to delve into the complexities of the original works when they reach an appropriate age. So, today, I want to share with you some of my favorite adaptations of the classics.



Taking the works of that great original storyteller, Homer, Padraic Colum has adapted the stories of Iliad and the Odyssey into an accessible format while maintaining the lyrical integrity of the original text. The drama of Odysseus epic journey, the intrigue of the cunning gods and goddesses of Greek mythology, the clanging battles, it all come alive in this excellent adaptation. The book also benefits from lovely line sketches by Willy Pogany, as seen below.


Geared for students in 5-8th grade, this will provide an exceptional introduction to the greatest classic epic!



Another Padraic Colum classic, also illustrated by Willy Pogany, this adaptation relates the adventures of Greek hero Jason. Padraic takes on this classic of Greek mythology and relates all the wonder and strangeness of this storied world. The tales offer an introduction to the pantheon of Greek mythical figures from Hercules to Orpheus to Theseus. Aimed at readers in 5th-8th grade. 



Taking the oldest recorded story in the world, Geraldine McCaughrean's version is a free adaptation from a variety of translations and it preserves the intrigue and adventure that make this work so well-loved. The work was originally carved on twelve stone tablets which, over thousands of years, were smashed into thousands of shards. Even now, for all the painstaking work of restoration, different scholars place the events of the story in different orders, and some episodes are still lost. Gilgamesh is thought to have been a real king reigning sometime between 3200BC and 2700BC over the Sumerian city of Uruk, in Mesopotamia (now Iraq). He led expeditions into neighboring territories, to fetch back timber for his grand building projects. The story of the Flood - several floods devastated the region - found its way into other cultures, ultimately into the Bible, undergoing changes according to the religion of the teller. The work of archaeology is incomplete; some of the tile fragments still baffle interpreters. This edition makes the work accessible to readers over the age of 10 years and if you would like further information on interpretation, check out our study guide for teaching the work using a Charlotte Mason approach. 



The original war diaries of Julius Caesar are a historian's treasure trove. They contain details of war, everyday life, Roman social order, and much more. But, for a young reader they can be quite dense so Olivia Coolidge's brilliant version brings the richness of detail to life for intermediate readers. Using the original diaries as her guide, she writes her version from the perspective of a young soldier serving Caesar in his quest for European domination. While much easier to read than the original, this is best for readers over the age of 10 or 11.



This has become a classic in its own right and I cannot think of a better way to introduce the complex world of Greek mythology to middle schoolers. Vibrantly illustrated, I remember spending hours pouring over these strange, intriguing, and fascinating stories. Greek mythology is a complex science and this book provides access into the imaginative world, provides a window into the beliefs of the ancient Greeks, and is just plain entertaining. 

I hope this provides a useful guide to some of the best adaptations of ancient classics. In the near future I will write a post on my favorite children's versions of more recent texts such as Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Shakespeare's tragic plays. 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

What is a classic?

While many people are able to name their favorite books or reference a generally accepted list of "classics" when asked, it is worth considering what makes a book worthy of the description. Of course, there are those classics that endure the test of time, the Bible, The Iliad, Pride and Prejudice. And there are those books that are marketed as "modern classics" like The Five People You Meet in Heaven. I'm not sure what makes a "modern classic" as I do believe that the test of time is a worthy one, but what about the books that are our personal classics? In choosing these books, I think that Italian writer, Italo Calvino presents key criteria in his book Why Read the Classics. He has 14 points by which he thinks the classics should be evaluated. Many of these are subjective and would allow a reader to choose his or her "own" classics based on these points. You can read all 14 points here but I would like to share my favorites:
  • The classics are those books about which you usually hear people saying: 'I'm rereading...', never 'I'm reading...'
  • The classics are those books which constitute a treasured experience for those who have read and loved them; but they remain just as rich an experience for those who reserve the chance to read them for when they are in the best condition to enjoy them.
  • The classics are books which exercise a particular influence, both when they imprint themselves on our imagination as unforgettable, and when they hide in the layers of memory disguised as the individual's or the collective unconscious.
  • A classic is a book which with each rereading offers as much of a sense of discovery as the first reading. 
  • A classic is a book which even when we read it for the first time gives the sense of rereading something we have read before.
  • A classic is a book which has never exhausted all it has to say to its readers.
  • Classics are books which, the more we think we know them through hearsay, the more original, unexpected, and innovative we find them when we actually read them.
  • 'Your' classic is a book to which you cannot remain indifferent, and which helps you define yourself in relation or even in opposition to it.
  • A classic is a work that comes before other classics; but those who have read other classics first immediately recognize its place in the genealogy of classic works.
  • A classic is a work which relegates the noise of the present to the background hum, which at the same time the classics cannot exist without.
I am interested in what you think of these criteria in relationship to children's books. For my family and our many hours of reading together, I think there were a few "classics" that really stand out in my memory; books that showed us what "classic" meant when applied to stories. We all loved The Little House in the Big Woods and Ralph Moody's Little Britches is a definite classic.

For those of you who want to build a library of children's classics, it is worth looking for Newbery and Caldecott award winners. Since 1921 the Newbery has been awarded each year to recognize "the most distinguished American children's book published in the previous year." It is generally a very reliable indicator of quality content–especially for those books published between 1945-1970. Here are a few of our favorites:

The Trumpeter of Krakow by Eric P. Kelly, 1929 Newbery Medal Winner

The Forgotten Daughter by Caroline Dale Snedecker, 1934 Newbery Honor Title

Call it Courage by Armstrong Sperry, 1941 Newbery Medal Winner

Blue Willow by Doris Gates, 1941 Newbery Honor Title

The Matchlock Gun by Walter D. Edmonds, 1942 Newbery Medal Winner


George Washington's World by Genevieve Foster, 1942 Newbery Honor Title

Adam of the Road by Elizabeth Janet Gray, 1943 Newbery Medal Winner

Johnny Tremain by Esther Forbes, 1944 Newbery Medal Winner

The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes, 1945 Newbery Honor Title


Abraham Lincoln's World by Genevieve Foster, 1945 Newbery Honor Title

Justin Morgan Had A Horse by Marguerite Henry, 1946 Newbery Honor Title

Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry, 1948 Newbery Honor Title

King of the Wind by Marguerite Henry, 1949 Newbery Medal Winner

Seabird by Holling Clancy Holling, 1949 Newbery Honor Title

The Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli, 1950 Newbery Medal Winner

Amos Fortune, Free Man by Elizabeth Yates, 1951 Newbery Medal Winner

Minn of the Mississippi by Holling Clancy Holling, 1952 Newbery Honor Title

The Courage of Sarah Noble by Alice Dalgliesh, 1955 Newbery Honor Title

Carry on, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Latham, 1956 Newbery Medal Winner


The House of Sixty Fathers by Miendert Dejong, 1957 Newbery Honor Title

Rifles for Watie by Harold Keith, 1958 Newbery Medal Winner

The Family Under the Bridge by Natalie Savage Carlson, 1959 Newbery Honor Title

Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell, 1961 Newbery Medal Winner

The Bronze Bow by Elizabeth George Speare, 1962 Newbery Medal Winner


The Golden Goblet by Eloise Jarvis McGraw, 1962 Newbery Honor Title

The Whipping Boy by Sid Fleischman, 1987 Newbery Medal Winner


Number the Stars by Lois Lowry, 1990 Newbery Medal Winner

Crispin, The Cross of Lead by Avi, 2003 Newbery Medal Winner

When considering Calvino's criteria for classics, what books come to your mind? What children's books? In this list of Newbery's there is a missing title that should absolutely be on it and that is To Kill a Mockingbird. What books do you think are missing? Do you disagree with the inclusion of any on this list? Later this week, I will provide a list of our favorite Caldecott Medal winners.