“Putting the Figure on the Map
Imagining Sameness and Difference for Children”
Cotsen Children’s Library at Princeton University Sept. 11-13, 2013
![Teaching Geography: hand-colored wood engraving, "The Party," from The Little Traveller (Dean & Monday, [ca. 1830])](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/LittleTraveller-sm-blog.jpg?resize=300%2C276&ssl=1)
Teaching Geography: hand-colored wood engraving, “The Party,” from The Little Traveller (Dean & Munday, [ca. 1830]) (Cotsen 3885)
Children’s books were important vehicles for the expression of senses of national identity that could confirm the superiority of one culture, marginalize others, instill a sense of international brotherhood or regional patriotism. Through a tangle of national types, stereotypes, and archetypes, children’s books shaped discourse as much as they reflected mainstream adult culture.
![Emer O'Sullivan delivers the keynote talk: "Picturing the World for Children: Early 19th-c. Images of Foreign Nations"](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/Emer.jpg?resize=150%2C150&ssl=1)
Emer O’Sullivan delivers the keynote talk: “Picturing the World for Children: Early 19th-c. Images of Foreign Nations”
Exploring these themes, and others, this interdisciplinary Cotsen Library conference featured presentations that drew on the approaches of imagology, history, anthropology, psychology, and literary criticism, to discuss modes of expression arising that either targeted children, within or without the classroom, or appropriated discourses for them, to present competing, complimentary or contradictory images of foreign nations.
Presenting scholars represented institutions across the United States, Canada, and Europe, including: Princeton, University of Toronto, University of Innsbruck, University of Cologne, Leuphana University, Aarhus University, Roehampton University, Anglia Ruskin University, Ohio State University, and Wells College. (A full listing of speakers, abstracts, and biographical profiles, as well as the conference program schedule is available on the Conference website.)
The conference program also included two workshops focusing on materials from the Cotsen research collection — Japanese Picture Sugoroku games and English “dissected maps” and geography games — with a selection of collection objects available for viewing by attendees.
Two of the Cotsen collection items on display for attendees to
see after the speakers’ presentations:
![Detail showing Africa and the Mediterranean area from an English "dissected map" comprised of 40 pieces mounted on mahogany; it served as a jig-saw puzzle to both teach and entertain children learning about geography. "Africa in its Principal Divisions" (London: J. Spilsbury, 1767).](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/DissectedMap.jpg?resize=300%2C222&ssl=1)
Detail showing Africa and the Mediterranean area from an English “dissected map” comprised of 40 pieces mounted on mahogany; it served as a jig-saw puzzle to both teach and entertain children learning about geography.
“Africa in its Principal Divisions”
[Five dissected maps of Africa, America, Asia, Europe, and Ireland]. (London: J. Spilsbury, 1767) (Cotsen 44482)
![Japanese Soguroku Game Board コドモアソビスゴロク ("A game on children's play") (Tokyo: Hakubunkan, 1917). Soguroku within sogoroku: the game board's theme is "children's play," with 12 panels of pictures are arranged by month. Each panel shows a children's leisure activity in that month; the panel for Jan. (bottom right) appropriately shows children playing sugoroku.](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/Sugoroku-55s.jpg?resize=216%2C300&ssl=1)
Japanese Soguroku Game Board
コドモアソビスゴロク
(“A game on children’s play”)
Kodomo asobi sugoroku. (Tokyo: Hakubunkan, 1917). (Cotsen 71687022)
Soguroku within sogoroku: the game board’s theme is “children’s play,” with 12 panels of pictures are arranged by month. Each panel shows a children’s leisure activity in that month; the panel for Jan. (bottom right) appropriately shows children playing sugoroku.
Some Presenters & Discussion at the Conference
(click on any thumbnail image to view larger version)
![Lara Saguisag: "Foreign Yet Familiar: The Immigrant Child in Progressive Era Comic Strips, 1896-1912"](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/Lara.jpg?resize=150%2C150&ssl=1)
Lara Saguisag:
“Foreign Yet Familiar: The Immigrant Child in Progressive Era Comic Strips, 1896-1912”
![Minjie Chen: "Foreigners Not (Yet) in One Box: Race & Foreign Nationals in Chinese Children's Materials, 1890-1920"](https://i0.wp.com/blogs.princeton.edu/cotsen/wp-content/uploads/sites/88/2014/01/Minjie.jpg?resize=150%2C150&ssl=1)
Minjie Chen:
“Foreigners Not (Yet) in One Box: Race & Foreign Nationals in Chinese Children’s Materials, 1890-1920”