Children’s literature once had high social and political stakes
The fact that children’s books can have a strongly formative influence upon the young has often attracted the attention of new leaders and regimes the world over, writes Kimberley Reynolds.
selves. They were not only concerned with engineering social change but also sought to transform how the world was perceived. Aesthetically radical works continued the general project of widening youthful horizons by celebrating children as artists and introducing aspects of the new arts associated with modernism.
These radical works included books opposing war, and books about modern architecture and design, class and unemployment, children’s health, sex education, the countryside, and all the sciences. EF Stucley’s Pollycon (1933) is one of a number of books that sought to teach children and young people the principles of economics because, as Stephen KingHall, a popular radio presenter of the day, declares in the book’s preface: “I cannot tell you too often that you will be a stupid ass if you do not make up your mind to learn about Economics.”
As here, radical children’s books assumed an audience of intelligent, capable, socially aware young readers and set about providing them with the skills, information, and inspiring social visions they would need to find solutions to the many problems confronting the world; problems that eventually resulted in a second world war, a global financial crisis, and mass social unrest and protest. They set about breaking down stereotypical attitudes to gender, race, class, poverty, ethnicity, nationality, and childhood.
One example is Martin’s Annual ( 1936), named for its leftist publisher, Martin Lawrence. This volume in- cluded stories about young freedom fighters and others who oppose fascism; lessons from nature in how the small and weak outwit the large and strong; a warning against the seductions of military recruiting regiments; accounts of Soviet heroes; cartoons deriding the Blackshirts, and a detailed critique of Britain’s national anthem. There were also comic poems, a revolutionary alphabet, recipes for healthy eating and a competition to find juvenile proletarian writers.
Then there’s Eddie and the Gipsy, by Alex Wedding — a 1935 book translated from the German in which, as the title suggests, a boy called Eddie becomes friends with a Romany girl. Illustrated with photographs of real children by John Heartfield (better-known for his antifascist montages and bitterly satirical images of Hitler), it captures the tensions in Germany during the Nazis’ rise to power and promotes trade union activism — forbidden under Hitler — as well as friendship across racial divides.
But Geoffrey Trease is the quintessential example of a radical children’s writer of the time. A founder member of the Promethean Society, a group for pacifists, humanists, and devotees of Freud, Marx, Wells, Shaw, Lenin, Trotsky, Gandhi, Havelock Ellis and DH Lawrence, in later life he recalled, “We believed … that the world’s poverty could be cured by a simple change in the financial system. War could be abolished by disarmament … and by non-violent demonstrations such as lying down in front of troop trains.” The rueful tone gives voice to the sense of disillusion felt by those who, like Trease, having hoped for so much from the Soviet experiment, saw it descend into show trials, the Great Terror and the Cold War.
Before that realisafetion, however, radical writers inspired British youth with a panoply of ideas and images of what the future could be like. Trease’s Bows Against the Barons ( 1934), a retelling of the Robin Hood story which uses the Middle Ages to talk about the Depression, includes a vision of a future in which “the common people will have twice as much as they have now, and there will be no more hunger or poverty in the land”. And many of the popular Puffin picture books encouraged children to think about how they could do things better when they had grown up and were running the country. SR Badmin, for example, ends his Village and Town (1942) with the questions: “Do you know we could have much better houses if they were well designed…. we could have towns which were clean and smokeless … which had plenty of playing grounds and no slums? …. Look at your own home town. Surely something better must be built next time?”
Peggy Hart’s The Magic of Coal (1945) shows a future in which the mining industry has become fully technologized, collectivised and sanitised. The cover image features a broad- chested miner with a tattoo of St George fighting a dragon on his chest, making miners modern day heroes and emblems of Britain. Miners are shown enjoying the facilities in the pit baths before setting off to nice homes on “fine” housing estates or to participate in activities including higher education classes and watching plays.
In the 1940s, interest in producing radical children’s literature receded as the kinds of futures they imagined move from the page into real life in the form of the emerging Welfare State. The 1942 Beveridge Report set out a series of milestones which became the 1944 Education Act (free secondary education for all), the National Insurance Act (protection against illness and unemployment), the building of the first council houses and the National Assistance Act (which provided for anyone in extreme poverty), culminating in the official launch of the National Health Service in 1948.
These texts may seem quaint now but we should not forget their legacies; indeed, there are lessons to be learned from them still. Compared with today’s output of gorgeously produced and varied children’s books they might look rather humble and earnest — but there is something deeply attractive about their aspirations for children and the future. Childhood reading develops intellects, imaginations and tastes. The generation for whom these radical texts were written was responsible for seeing that the young Welfare State flourished, for making Britain part of Europe — at least for a time — and for placing it at the centre of youth culture and fashion. Geoffrey Trease could only imagine a distant future when life would be better for ordinary people, but by 1949 Britain was a genuinely fairer place with cradle- to-grave care and world-leading, childcentred primary education.
While the hopes and ambitions for lasting peace and global government featured in these books may not have materialised, the vision of a more socially just and progressive society that lies at the heart of radical children’s writing continues to shape Britain today. The part played by radical children’s literature in this social transformation deserves to be remembered and perpetuated. Rarely has it been more important for the rising generation to be well-informed, to master new technologies and to be prepared to help with the work of making the world safer, fairer and more sustainable. Today we are blessed with a wealth of writing for the young, but much of the most socially engaged, forward-looking writing takes a dystopian stance. Young readers today could surely benefit from the same determination to inspire progressive thinking — and a belief that the future can be better than the present if they will help make it so — that characterised this forgotten chapter in the history of children’s publishing. THE INDEPENDENT
Before that realisafetion, however, radical writers inspired British youth with a panoply of ideas and images of what the future could be like. Trease’s Bows Against the Barons (1934), a retelling of the Robin Hood story which uses the Middle Ages to talk about the Depression, includes a vision of a future in which “the common people will have twice as much as they have now, and there will be no more hunger or poverty in the land”.