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Children’s Literature Review now available online at SFU Library

Friday, January 21st, 2011

SFU Library has recently purchased the complete digital backfiles for several of Gale’s award-winning literary criticism series.  These series provide access to hundreds of volumes of biographical and critical essays on the lives, works, and careers of the world’s most influential literary figures from all eras and genres.

Of particular interest to Education may be Children’s Literature Review, which can now be accessed and searched online:

http://cufts2.lib.sfu.ca/CRDB/BVAS/resource/10851

**Note: This product provides access to the complete backfiles for this series, up until June 30, 2010 only**

Please do not hesitate to contact Baharak Yousefi (Burnaby) or Holly Hendrigan (Surrey)  if you have any questions or feedback.

American Library Association Announces Youth Media Award Winners

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

SAN DIEGO – January 10, 2011: The American Library Association (ALA)  announced the top books, video and audiobooks for children and young adults – including the Caldecott, Coretta Scott King, Newbery and Printz awards – at its Midwinter Meeting in San Diego.

For a list of award winners, please see here.

Trudeau Lecture: Clare Bradford on Children’s Literature (Sept. 21st)

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

You are invited to attend a free lecture and reception on Tuesday, September 21 at 7:00 p.m, sponsored by Simon Fraser University and the Trudeau Foundation.

Professor Clare Bradford from the University of Winnipeg/Deakin University, Australia will be speaking on “What Children’s Literature Tells Us”.  Go to www.sfu.ca/reserve to reserve your seat.

Clare Bradford is a professor in the School of Communication and Creative Arts at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.  Her research examines the interplay between children’s literature and the social practices which it represents and advocates.  She has focused especially on representations of Indigenous peoples and cultures in children’s texts, and on Indigenous textuality for children, publishing two books on this topic: Reading Race: Aboriginality in Australian Children’s Literature (2001), and Unsettling Narratives: Postcolonial Readings of Children’s Literature (2007), in addition to many essays.  Unsettling Narratives is the first comparative study of settler society literatures for children, embracing Australian, Canadian, New Zealand and US texts.  A second strand of research has examined how children’s literature following the end of the Cold War has engaged with political, social and environmental questions, addressed in her book New World Orders in Children’s Literature: Utopian Transformations (2008), co-authored with three Australian colleagues.  A third collaborative project has focused on Australian children’s texts since 1990, exploring the values they promote relating to multiculturalism, immigration and community relations.  She was a member of a SSHRC-funded team, based at University of Winnipeg, which focused on discourses of home in Canadian children’s literature.  Her books have attracted international prizes:Reading Race was awarded the International Research Society for Children’s Literature Award in 2003 as well as the Children’s Literature Association Book Award for the best critical work published in 2001.  Unsettling Narratives received the Children’s Literature Association’s Honor Award.  She is currently President of the International Research Society for Children’s Literature.

TD Canadian Children’s Book Week: Nov. 14-21, 2009

Monday, September 28th, 2009

From the TD Canadian Children’s Book Week website (below).  This year’s Book Week runs from Saturday, November 14 to Saturday, November 21, 2009:

TD Canadian Children’s Book Week will celebrate sports in preparation for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games which will be held on home snow and ice in Vancouver, BC just a few months after Book Week.

The official theme for Book Week 2009 is Gold Medal Reading! and the Canadian Children’s Book Centre will pull together a list of sports-related books for teachers and librarians to share with their students. From the Brady Brady hockey series by Mary Shaw and Chuck Temple, to Eric Walters’s sports books in the Orca Young Readers series, to Sigmund Brouwer’s books in the Orca Sports series, there are scores of great Canadian books about sports!

The official site of the 2010 Olympic Winter Games is www.vancouver2010.com. Under the “Celebrate” tab, you can find information on legendary athletes, a countdown to 2010, as well as a ‘Fun Zone’ with introductions to the 2010 Olympic mascots and online games.”

More information on Book Week is available here: http://www.bookweek.ca/book-week/book-week-theme

And many of the featured books listed above are available in the SFU Library Curriculum Collection — try a search by author or title!