Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Gender Stereotypes


I was looking for some books that deal with racial stereotypes, so we can introduce the idea of "stereotypes" to G.  We've discussed the idea of stereotypes a little, but I like books as sources of visual and concrete learning when I can find them.  In the process of looking for books, I came across this list of books combatting gender stereotypes.  It looks like a great list.  We've read the Princess Knight book, and it's a fun read with a useful message.  In the book, when a king holds a contest, offering the winner his daughter's hand in marriage, she is upset.  The princess anonymously enters the contest covered in armor and wins.  G has always liked the book since we stumbled on it.  Other books in the list below, look promising as well.

http://humaneconnectionblog.blogspot.com/2012/06/12-childrens-picture-books-that.html

Friday, April 5, 2013

Ganesha's Sweet Tooth

Ganesha's Sweet Tooth
By Emily Haynes and Sanjay Patel

I recently heard about and requested Ganesha's Sweet Tooth from our local library.  The book takes a playful look at how Ganesha agreed to become the scribe of the Mahabharata.  The story mixes in some Indian words (laddoos) with descriptions of a sweet as a "Super Jaw Breaker."  The pictures are distinct and cleanly colorful.  The language is funny and light-hearted.  It's a quick read for GG, a seven year old, but it's a nice way for a kid to learn how Vyasa and Ganesha decided to record the Mahabharata.  One of the authors, Sanjay Patel, also wrote The Little Book of Hindu Deities which we added to our collection a few years ago.  The illustration style in both books is very similar.  This would be a great gift for a toddler or preschool aged kid.


 

Monday, March 25, 2013

Mahabharata


The Mahabharata
By Namita Gokhale

I am just finishing The Palace of Illusions by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.  Given that I've been married to AA for almost 13 years, and he grew up on these stories, it's amazing that I haven't read a version of it before and didn't know the basics of the story.  It's been a pretty transformative experience for me.  As AA said, "People say that the Mahabharata, the longest story in the world, is a library.  It is not a single story but is a repository containing all the stories."  If one isn't feeling very "universalist," one can alway say it contains all Indian (or ancient/pre-modern) Indian stories.  There are endless variations.  There are many, many characters.  Divakaruni does a great job of introducing a number of characters in a mere 300 pages.  Hers is told from the POV of Draupadi, wife to the Pandavas.  It's made me interested in reading other versions, but it's not a kid's book.

We started reading the Puffin version of the Mahabharata by Namita Gokhale to GG.  She is interested in it, but she's pretty confused about who is who and what their relationship/back story is in the book.  We're not far into it, yet, and she keeps saying, "I don't get it."  We stop and explain, but there are so many characters she's getting confused.  I think the authors could have cut out some of the characters.  While there are arguments that they're still in the story because they're major characters, a book for kids should streamline and make minor or unnamed some of the many, many characters to help kids get their heads around it.  We might have to quit, and start with the comics instead.  While generations of Indian kids have grown up reading Amar Chitra Katha's comic books about the epics, one of the things that bothers me is how skin color is portrayed in them (whitening the good characters, for instance).  We can have conversations about those editorial decisions, but visual images are still pretty powerful.  Such is life.  If anyone has a good version of the Mahabharata for a 1st or 2nd grader who isn't very familiar with the story, yet, it would be helpful to hear about it.

Amar Chitra Katha comics:

Gods and Goddesses (22 in 1 special edition)