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25 ‘Sober Soldiers’: How Children’s Temperance Magazines Won the First World War
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements xiii
- General Introduction: Reading, Writing, and Creating Communities in Children’s Periodicals 1
-
Part I Telling Tales
- Introduction 25
- 1 The Lilliputian Magazine: Entertaining Education in the Service of Profit and Reform 29
- 2 For the Youth, By the Youth: Child-Centrism and the Rise of the Fantastic in Juvenile Print Cultures in Nineteenth-Century Ireland 45
- 3 Old and New World Fairy Tales in St Nicholas Magazine 64
- 4 Enid Blyton’s Wartime Sunny Stories: Facilitating Fantasies of Child Heroism 79
- 5 Girls Growing Up: Reading ‘Erotic Bloods’ in Interwar Britain 93
- 6 ‘There’s no room for demons when you’re self-possessed’: Supernatural Possession in British Girls’ Comics 112
-
Part II Making Readers and Writers
- Introduction 133
- 7 The Literary Olympic and Riddle Tournament: Competition and Community in Young Folks Paper (1871–1897) 137
- 8 Children’s Columns in British Regional Newspapers 153
- 9 School Magazines, Collective Cultures, and the Making of Late Victorian Periodical Culture 172
- 10 Charity, Cultural Exchange, and Generational Difference in Scottish Children’s Writings about the First World War 194
- 11 ‘My great ambition is to be an authoress’: Constructing Space for Literary Girlhoods in Australasian Children’s Correspondence Pages, 1900–1930 212
- 12 The Indian English Periodical Target: Popularity and Nostalgia 231
- 13 Classic Adventures and the Construction of the ‘Classic’ Reader in the 1990s 244
-
Part III Place and Self
- Introduction 265
- 14 The Brownies’ Book and the American Children’s Publishing Industry 270
- 15 Who Speaks for Welsh Children? Early Welsh Children’s Periodicals 291
- 16 Colonial Modernity in Print Culture: Revisiting Juvenile Periodicals in Nineteenth- Century Bengal 310
- 17 Imagined Communities: Digital Tools for the Study of St Nicholas’s Global and National Readership 331
- 18 Teaching Humanitarianism to British Children through the Junior Red Cross Journal in the 1920s 349
- 19 The Portrayal of Japanese Girls in British Girls’ Magazines between the 1880s and 1910s 366
- 20 Scottish Stereotyping, Highlandism, and Stevenson in Young Folks Paper 382
-
Part IV Politics and Activism
- Introduction 403
- 21 ‘I address you as owners’: The Victorian Child, the Missionary Ship, and the Juvenile Missionary Magazine 406
- 22 Conservationists or Conquerors? Children, Nature, and the Environment in the Juvenile Companion and Sunday School Hive (1845–1888) 421
- 23 ‘Everyone is requested to do all they can to get this paper taken in’: The Pleasures and Duties of Children’s Charity in the Waifs and Strays Society 438
- 24 ‘The whole world is unquiet’: Imperial Rivalry and Global Politics in the London Pupil Teachers’ Association Record 452
- 25 ‘Sober Soldiers’: How Children’s Temperance Magazines Won the First World War 469
- 26 ‘Inspire the Communist rebel spirit in the young people of our class’: An Overview of Communist Children’s Periodicals in Britain, 1917–1929 488
- 27 Wild Nature, Ecoliteracy, and Activism in Children’s Environmental Periodicals 506
-
Part V Girlhoods and Boyhoods
- Introduction 525
- 28 Gendering Physical Activity and Sport in the Girl’s Own Paper and Boy’s Own Paper 529
- 29 ‘Young film friends’: Gendering Children’s Film Culture in Interwar Film Periodicals 550
- 30 ‘What becomes of the colored girl?’: Shifts in the Culture of Black Girlhood within the Brownies’ Book 570
- 31 Mid-Century Models: Postwar Girls’ Comics, Fashion, and Self-Fashioning 591
- 32 ‘A power in the home’: The Rise of the Teenage Girl Magazine and the Teen Girl Reader in Australia and the USA 609
- 33 ‘My friend really loves history . . . can she look at that really old Jackie?’ Contemporary Girls Encountering Historical Periodicals for Girls 625
- Notes on Contributors 642
- Index 648
- Plate 667
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements xiii
- General Introduction: Reading, Writing, and Creating Communities in Children’s Periodicals 1
-
Part I Telling Tales
- Introduction 25
- 1 The Lilliputian Magazine: Entertaining Education in the Service of Profit and Reform 29
- 2 For the Youth, By the Youth: Child-Centrism and the Rise of the Fantastic in Juvenile Print Cultures in Nineteenth-Century Ireland 45
- 3 Old and New World Fairy Tales in St Nicholas Magazine 64
- 4 Enid Blyton’s Wartime Sunny Stories: Facilitating Fantasies of Child Heroism 79
- 5 Girls Growing Up: Reading ‘Erotic Bloods’ in Interwar Britain 93
- 6 ‘There’s no room for demons when you’re self-possessed’: Supernatural Possession in British Girls’ Comics 112
-
Part II Making Readers and Writers
- Introduction 133
- 7 The Literary Olympic and Riddle Tournament: Competition and Community in Young Folks Paper (1871–1897) 137
- 8 Children’s Columns in British Regional Newspapers 153
- 9 School Magazines, Collective Cultures, and the Making of Late Victorian Periodical Culture 172
- 10 Charity, Cultural Exchange, and Generational Difference in Scottish Children’s Writings about the First World War 194
- 11 ‘My great ambition is to be an authoress’: Constructing Space for Literary Girlhoods in Australasian Children’s Correspondence Pages, 1900–1930 212
- 12 The Indian English Periodical Target: Popularity and Nostalgia 231
- 13 Classic Adventures and the Construction of the ‘Classic’ Reader in the 1990s 244
-
Part III Place and Self
- Introduction 265
- 14 The Brownies’ Book and the American Children’s Publishing Industry 270
- 15 Who Speaks for Welsh Children? Early Welsh Children’s Periodicals 291
- 16 Colonial Modernity in Print Culture: Revisiting Juvenile Periodicals in Nineteenth- Century Bengal 310
- 17 Imagined Communities: Digital Tools for the Study of St Nicholas’s Global and National Readership 331
- 18 Teaching Humanitarianism to British Children through the Junior Red Cross Journal in the 1920s 349
- 19 The Portrayal of Japanese Girls in British Girls’ Magazines between the 1880s and 1910s 366
- 20 Scottish Stereotyping, Highlandism, and Stevenson in Young Folks Paper 382
-
Part IV Politics and Activism
- Introduction 403
- 21 ‘I address you as owners’: The Victorian Child, the Missionary Ship, and the Juvenile Missionary Magazine 406
- 22 Conservationists or Conquerors? Children, Nature, and the Environment in the Juvenile Companion and Sunday School Hive (1845–1888) 421
- 23 ‘Everyone is requested to do all they can to get this paper taken in’: The Pleasures and Duties of Children’s Charity in the Waifs and Strays Society 438
- 24 ‘The whole world is unquiet’: Imperial Rivalry and Global Politics in the London Pupil Teachers’ Association Record 452
- 25 ‘Sober Soldiers’: How Children’s Temperance Magazines Won the First World War 469
- 26 ‘Inspire the Communist rebel spirit in the young people of our class’: An Overview of Communist Children’s Periodicals in Britain, 1917–1929 488
- 27 Wild Nature, Ecoliteracy, and Activism in Children’s Environmental Periodicals 506
-
Part V Girlhoods and Boyhoods
- Introduction 525
- 28 Gendering Physical Activity and Sport in the Girl’s Own Paper and Boy’s Own Paper 529
- 29 ‘Young film friends’: Gendering Children’s Film Culture in Interwar Film Periodicals 550
- 30 ‘What becomes of the colored girl?’: Shifts in the Culture of Black Girlhood within the Brownies’ Book 570
- 31 Mid-Century Models: Postwar Girls’ Comics, Fashion, and Self-Fashioning 591
- 32 ‘A power in the home’: The Rise of the Teenage Girl Magazine and the Teen Girl Reader in Australia and the USA 609
- 33 ‘My friend really loves history . . . can she look at that really old Jackie?’ Contemporary Girls Encountering Historical Periodicals for Girls 625
- Notes on Contributors 642
- Index 648
- Plate 667