Abstract

This article explores 11-year-old children’s connections to prior knowledge and experiences while reading a wordless version of Little Red Riding Hood. The study extends pre-existing research on reader response theories by focusing on images instead of written text. The approach taken places emphasis on the reader’s active engagement, for readers use visual decoding skills and culturally oriented knowledge in an effort to interpret the wordless story and fill its gaps. A multiple case study design was implemented involving sixteen students from Greece and England, all being in the final year of primary school and identified as fluent readers. The participants in each country, separated into two groups of four, read the book in an empty classroom, with no teacher intervention. The aim was to identify patterns in their unmediated responses, and to present and analyse the themes of their connections based on empirical evidence. The participants linked the illustrations to their common general knowledge, including cultural references and gender-based generalisations, to personal experiences, and to other texts such as books and films. The findings reveal the prevalence of common themes in their interpretations of the story and encourage engagement with wordless picturebooks, even for older students. Due to their special nature and complexity, these books can initiate interesting conversations on issues such as identity and gender diversity.

Highlights

  • Wordless picturebooks tell their stories through illustrations without the aid of print

  • Even though there is much to say about picturebooks in general and how children engage with them, academic interest in wordless picturebooks has been sparked only during the last decades

  • The themes that emerged are connections to their common general knowledge, personal and intertextual references, all discussed in detail in the following subsections

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Summary

Introduction

Wordless picturebooks tell their stories through illustrations without the aid of print. Studies conducted on pre-reading children have shown that wordless picturebooks have positive effects with respect to emergent literacy (Lindauer, 1988; Lysaker, 2006, 2019; Lysaker & Miller, 2013; Reese, 1996) which highlights them as a very helpful tool for new readers; there is room for research and discussion with regards to an older audience, especially to proficient readers of verbal texts. The study informing this paper was conducted as part of my PhD research at the University of Cambridge (Iordanaki, 2017) It brings together traditional reader response theories and the relatively new field of wordless picturebooks with the purpose of exploring 11-year-old children’s connections while reading wordless picturebooks with no adult intervention, in two different contexts: Greece and England. The removal of the linguistic barrier gives the opportunity to explore the same illustrations with groups from two different countries and to identify patterns in their responses

Filling the Visual Gaps
Research Context
Making Connections
Common General Knowledge
Cultural Traditions
Gender Stereotypes
Personal Experiences
Intertextual Connections
Conclusion
Full Text
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