Do Not Be Afraid To Be Afraid - The Eighth Philippa Pearce Memorial Lecture

Duration: 57 mins 17 secs
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Description: Renowned children’s author Meg Rosoff delivered the eighth annual Philippa Pearce Lecture at Homerton College. The Lecture series is convened in memory of Philippa Pearce, winner of the Carnegie Medal in 1958 for Tom’s Midnight Garden, and author of over 30 other books. The Lectures celebrate “excellence in writing for children and to emphasise its continuing vital importance”. Previous lectures have been given by eminent children’s authors including Philip Pullman, Malorie Blackman and Michael Morpurgo.

http://www.pearcelecture.com/
 
Created: 2015-10-16 16:18
Collection: The Philippa Pearce Memorial Lecture
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: The Philippa Pearce Memorial Lecture
Language: eng (English)
Distribution: World     (downloadable)
Keywords: children's literature; Meg Rosoff; Philippa Pearce; English; literature; Education;
Credits:
Author:  Meg Rosoff
Categories: iTunes - Literature - Fiction
iTunes - Teaching & Learning
Explicit content: No
Aspect Ratio: 4:3
Screencast: No
Bumper: UCS Default
Trailer: UCS Default
 
Abstract: In a talk that ranged effortlessly from Goldilocks and the Tooth Fairy to Harry Potter and Albert Einstein, Meg left us in awe – but also inspired and empowered. Starting from her own particular connection with Philippa Pearce, she described how, having first met the octogenarian author as a “fawning middle-aged fan”, she went on to champion Pearce’s The Little Gentleman as a member of the Guardian Children’s Book Prize panel. Since the rest of the panel were not convinced that death was a suitable subject for children’s literature, it did not win. But there in the lecture, Meg felt, justice was done. And so, with humour and humility she examined the vital role of fantasy, fairytale and fear – and their attendant risks – in the lives of children.

Taking her title from a line in Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time, Meg used her powers of storytelling, and drew on research, literature and personal experience, to demonstrate that fear itself is not the problem. And that, paradoxically, if we shy away from it, we will find ourselves in the grip of another fear – that of failure. Indeed, she observed, some commentators warn that we now have a society raising a compliant generation so fearful of failure they are unable to take risks, to be intellectually curious.

Conversely, as Meg argued, children all need to experience risk, to have the freedom to explore the “What ifs …” Which is precisely what stories of all kinds, from fairytales to young adult novels afford. Richard Dawkins may prescribe “fostering scepticism instead of filling their heads with fantasy”, but imagination – the quality that sets the human species apart – is needed for science as much as for storytelling. As Meg pointed out, for some of the most fantastic stories ever invented, you only have to turn to the spinning tales of multiverses and black holes.

But the message was not only for children and their parents, or for would-be scientists. Talking candidly of the very real challenges in being a writer, and of that “awkward period between novels when the existence of the next book is not a foregone conclusion”, Meg deftly turned her attention to the risk-taking required of the children’s or YA author, who “gives young people the power to shape their own stories”. Again, fiction and fantasy hold the key, and for her it is Dr Seuss’ The Cat in the Hat (“reads like a postmodern anarchist’s handbook”) which supplies the essential image. “I have become my hero; I am the 58-year-old that sneaks into the house and causes havoc,” she revealed. Thus, she ended by issuing her provocation, not to her audience, or to child readers, but to herself: “think big thoughts, and do not be afraid to be afraid”.

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