Reviews
Sugarcoated Ethics offers a transformative conceptual vocabulary for scholars working to elucidate the how modern ideas about childhood evolved in tandem with evolving ideas about slavery. Through innovative transhistorical methods, this book both recovers suppressed Afro-Caribbean traditions and demonstrates how the pathological relationalities established in these early understudied texts persist today. A must-read for anyone working in childhood literature and childhood studies.
Beautifully written, meticulously researched, and methodologically innovative, this field-changing book opens up so many exciting new pathways for future scholarship. Weikle-Mills radically expands our understanding of how transnational early children's literature was and recovers meaningful traces of how enslaved and free Afro-Caribbean readers engaged with Anglo-American children's books and their own indigenous art forms. A major critical contribution.
Book Details
Table of Contents
Introduction: Enslavement and the Ethical Stakes of Children's Literature
1. Early Children's Literature and White Civility
2. Afro-Caribbean Stories in the Battle over Childhood
3
Table of Contents
Introduction: Enslavement and the Ethical Stakes of Children's Literature
1. Early Children's Literature and White Civility
2. Afro-Caribbean Stories in the Battle over Childhood
3. Taking Responsibility for the Other in Sugar Boycott Books
4. The Ethics of Circulation in the Enslaved and Colonized West Indies
5. Traces of Atlantic Relations in Early Global Children's Literature
Conclusion: Relating Ethically in the Archives
Notes