Abstract
Once you were children. If you did not read The Carrot Seed or Harold and the Purple Crayon, probably your children or your friends' children did. You might have learned internationalism from The Big World and the Little House, or cultural relativism from Who's Upside Down?, or freethinking and obstinacy from Barnaby. If you did not, it is likely your friends and future comrades did. What you might not have learned is that all these children's books (and many other progressive favorites) were authored by one or the other or both members of a couple whose left politics inflected their work.… Philip Nel—the editor, with Julia L. Mickenberg, of Tales for Little Rebels: A Collection of Radical Children's Literature…—has devoted himself to rescuing twentieth-century radical children's literature and its authors from relative oblivion.This article can also be found at the Monthly Review website, where most recent articles are published in full.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
Published Version
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