East-Asian philosophical concepts as analytical framework for interpreting non-western images in children’s picturebooks
chapter
posted on 2023-05-24, 07:00authored byHuynh, NT, Angela Thomas, Vinh ToVinh To
In contemporary Western cultures, picturebooks are a mainstream means for young children to first attend to print and start learning to read. The use of children’s picturebooks has been reported as supporting intercultural awareness in children. Multiliteracies researchers suggest that other theoretical frameworks should be applied in addition to the semiotic approach of interpreting picturebooks, especially picturebooks from non-Western cultures. This chapter aims to theorize how Eastern philosophical concepts influence the meaning-making potential of illustrations in Eastern picturebooks. To do this, the authors first discuss the cultural constraints when applying a contemporary semiotic framework in analyzing non-Western images. Then, the authors introduce a framework developed based on philosophical concepts that have influenced East-Asian art forms, particularly that of painting, to understand the Eastern artistic traditions. After that, this chapter demonstrates how to apply this framework for interpretation of non-Western images to working with multicultural picturebooks.
History
Publication title
Handbook of research on cultivating literacy in diverse and multilingual classrooms
Editors
Neokleous G, Krulatz A, Farrelly R
Pagination
393-420
ISBN
1799827224
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
IGI Global
Place of publication
United States
Extent
29
Rights statement
Copyright 2020 IGI Global
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Literature; Pedagogy; Teaching and curriculum not elsewhere classified