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Book Cover for: Writing Youth: Young Adult Fiction as Literacy Sponsorship, Jonathan Alexander

Writing Youth: Young Adult Fiction as Literacy Sponsorship

Jonathan Alexander

Writing Youth: Young Adult Fiction as Literacy Sponsorship shows how many young adult novels model for young people ways to manage the various media tools that surround them. Jonathan Alexander examines not only young adult texts and their media ecologies but also young people's multiliterate media making in response to their favorite texts and stories. As such, this book will be of interest to anyone concerned about young people's literacies and the relationship between literacy development and the culture industries.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Lexington Books
  • Publish Date: Dec 20th, 2016
  • Pages: 206
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.10in - 6.10in - 0.90in - 1.05lb
  • EAN: 9781498538428
  • Categories: Writing - GeneralChildren's & Young Adult LiteratureCommunication Studies

About the Author

Jonathan Alexander is Chancellor's Professor of English and director of the Center for Excellence in Writing and Communication at University of California, Irvine.

Praise for this book

Overall, Writing Youth is extremely valuable in that it explicitly recognizes young adult fiction as embedded within a wider cultural media context in which young people are not merely passive consumers, but are actively engaged and agential. Alexander's concept of literacy sponsorship has wide-reaching implications not only for literary critics but also for educators and publishers.
This book is a much-needed "coming of age" account of young adult literature that explicitly recognizes how books are not bound by their covers, but extend--or spread--across a range of commercial commodities and youth-produced texts and practices. Alexander provides compelling analyses that identify the current profound commodification of reading, while at the same time clearly point to spaces and networks within which youth themselves are engaging in literacy practices that are active, productive, and deeply satisfying. This is must-read book for everyone who works with youth, in education, or in the media industry.
Jonathan Alexander offers a timely and keen analysis of how young adult literature promotes forms of adolescent literacy shaped by market forces. Writing Youth analyzes contemporary YA fiction as an important route to understanding adolescent identity, youth culture, and literacy education, and it explores the fascinating ways young people create their own multimedia responses to the products produced for them by adults.
Anyone wanting a more nuanced understanding of how literacy works in the daily lives of young people should read this incisive exploration of the ways in which Young Adult Fiction shapes important cultural perceptions of technology, institutions, and identity. Jonathan Alexander's exploration of some of the most popular narratives in contemporary culture is a reminder of what we gain when we pay attention to, and take seriously, the complex relationships between young people and the popular culture texts they value.