Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France

“Why am I talking to you about May ’68?”, asked the children’s publisher Arthur Hubschmid at a conference in 2005, “well, it changed things for us radically, that’s why”. The years around May ’68 are widely understood to have marked an important moment for children’s literature, particularly picture...

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Main Author: Sophie Heywood
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE) 2018-05-01
Series:Strenae
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/1838
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author Sophie Heywood
author_facet Sophie Heywood
author_sort Sophie Heywood
collection DOAJ
description “Why am I talking to you about May ’68?”, asked the children’s publisher Arthur Hubschmid at a conference in 2005, “well, it changed things for us radically, that’s why”. The years around May ’68 are widely understood to have marked an important moment for children’s literature, particularly picturebooks, in France. The late 1960s to the late 1970s are typically portrayed as a period of renewal, even revolution, in the ways people conceptualised children’s picturebooks, which led to great experimentation and ebullition in the genre. Some even speak of the “May ’68 of children’s books”. This essay argues that the visual transformation, and change in status of picturebooks, were also the product of a wider, political debate around children’s books, and that we should take seriously the role of ’68 in this narrative. Thus far, 68 has been a neat shorthand for scholars to paint these years as so exciting that even children’s publishers could be hippie rebels. This period, I will argue, can also tell us a lot more about the history of the child in the cultural rebellions of the sixties, and how children and their culture became caught up in postwar social and cultural ideals and their counter cultural response. At the same time, understood as a form of cultural politics, the ’68 of children’s picturebooks provides a telling and distinct example of the different effects of ‘68.
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publisher Association Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE)
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spelling doaj-art-3ff7afbbbcb04c54b8461aa3e711fefd2025-08-20T02:20:11ZfraAssociation Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE)Strenae2109-90812018-05-011310.4000/strenae.1838Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in FranceSophie Heywood“Why am I talking to you about May ’68?”, asked the children’s publisher Arthur Hubschmid at a conference in 2005, “well, it changed things for us radically, that’s why”. The years around May ’68 are widely understood to have marked an important moment for children’s literature, particularly picturebooks, in France. The late 1960s to the late 1970s are typically portrayed as a period of renewal, even revolution, in the ways people conceptualised children’s picturebooks, which led to great experimentation and ebullition in the genre. Some even speak of the “May ’68 of children’s books”. This essay argues that the visual transformation, and change in status of picturebooks, were also the product of a wider, political debate around children’s books, and that we should take seriously the role of ’68 in this narrative. Thus far, 68 has been a neat shorthand for scholars to paint these years as so exciting that even children’s publishers could be hippie rebels. This period, I will argue, can also tell us a lot more about the history of the child in the cultural rebellions of the sixties, and how children and their culture became caught up in postwar social and cultural ideals and their counter cultural response. At the same time, understood as a form of cultural politics, the ’68 of children’s picturebooks provides a telling and distinct example of the different effects of ‘68.https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/18381968politicscounter-culturechildren’s book publisherspicture bookchildren’s culture
spellingShingle Sophie Heywood
Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
Strenae
1968
politics
counter-culture
children’s book publishers
picture book
children’s culture
title Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
title_full Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
title_fullStr Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
title_full_unstemmed Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
title_short Power to children’s imaginations. May ’68 and counter culture for children in France
title_sort power to children s imaginations may 68 and counter culture for children in france
topic 1968
politics
counter-culture
children’s book publishers
picture book
children’s culture
url https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/1838
work_keys_str_mv AT sophieheywood powertochildrensimaginationsmay68andcountercultureforchildreninfrance