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CURIOUSER AND
CURIOUSER!
ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND (1865),
LEWIS CARROLL
T
he concept of “childhood”
was really only invented
in the 18th century, when
the middle classes began to see the
value of a child’s innocence and
play. For most of literary history,
children were rarely mentioned,
occasionally appearing in such
works as Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s
Émile and William Wordsworth’s
The Prelude. In the 19th century,
Charles Dickens sometimes placed
children in the foreground of his
stories, but only in books for adults.
Most tales written for, as
opposed to about, children were
adaptations of adult stories, or
morally didactic. In the early 19th
century, the Brothers Grimm’s
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
The invention of childhood
BEFORE
1812 Swiss pastor Johann
David Wyss’s Swiss Family
Robinson focuses on four
children who, with their
parents, discover self-
sufficiency on a desert island.
1863 The hero of The Water
Babies, by English author
Charles Kingsley, is a young
chimney sweep who learns
moral lessons in a fantastic
underwater realm.
AFTER
1883 Italian Carlo Collodi’s
The Adventures of Pinocchio,
featuring a marionette, is a
moral tale for children.
1894 Characters in English
author Rudyard Kipling’s The
Jungle Book include Mowgli,
a boy raised by wolves, and
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, a mongoose.
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