Marilyn Fain Apseloff Explained

Marilyn Fain Apseloff
Birth Date:March 18, 1934
Birth Place:Attleboro, Massachusetts, U.S.
Occupation:Professor of English
Spouse:Stanford S. Apseloff (m. 1956)
Children:4: Roy, Stanford, Glen, Lynn

Marilyn Fain Apseloff (March 18, 1934 - February 22, 2018) was an American author and a professor at Kent State University, known for her study of children's literature.

Early life and education

Apseloff was born Marilyn Fain in 1934 in Attleboro, Massachusetts to Arthur and Eve Fain. Apseloff received her bachelor's degree from the University of Cincinnati in 1956, and her master's degree from the University of Cincinnati in 1957. She also completed a fellowship at the University of Cincinnati in 1957. Her formal introduction to children's literature began when her husband urged her to take a class at Kent State University, where he taught.

Career

Apseloff became a teaching assistant for the Children's Literature class at Kent State, then a part-time instructor in 1969.  After promotions to Assistant and Associate Professor in the English department, she became a full Professor in 1992.

Apseloff was among the early leadership of the Children's Literature Association (ChLA), founded in 1973 to provide a professional hub for scholarly study and criticism of children's literature, a field at that time in its infancy. She served on the association's board of directors from 1976 to 1985, as treasurer from 1976 to 1977, and president from 1979 to 1980.[1] She was the chair of the organization's conference at Harvard University in 1979.

Apseloff attended the 1979 First White House Conference on Library and Information Services as the president of the Children's Literature Association and spoke before a Senate committee. She also presented a paper on the importance of child-specific services and literature, and the work the ChLA was doing in these areas.[2]

Her writings discuss and analyze literature ranging from books for babies to adult poetry for children, and she wrote about controversial subjects in children's literature, including death,[3] abandonment,[4] war, and suicide. She also wrote analysis of children's novels[5] [6] and biographical essays about authors.[7]

During her career, Apseloff served as a contributing editor of the Children’s Literature Quarterly from 1979-1982, then as a co-editor in 1983, and as an editor from 1984-1987. She taught and presented her work both nationally and internationally, including in Greece, Poland, and Lithuania. She also contributed her time to the Kent Free Public Library and local schools.

Much of Apseloff's scholarly writing concerned absurdist and nonsense literature for children.[8] With Celia Catlett Anderson, she wrote Nonsense Literature for Children: Aesop to Seuss,[9] which was chosen as a Book Award Honorable Mention by the Children's Literature Association in 1991.[10] [11] The book received positive reviews in both The School Library Journal, and the journal Emergency Librarian,[12] and along with related articles continues to be cited by scholars who are extending knowledge in the field of children's literary criticism and those studying the works of Theodor Geisel, Lewis Carroll, and Edward Gorey.[13] [14]

Apseloff also studied the writings of authors whose primary audience is adults but who also created books for children, and works for adults that could be adapted for children. In addition to a number of articles on this topic, Apseloff wrote the book They Wrote for Children Too: An Annotated Bibliography of Children's Books by Famous Writers for Adults.[15] [16]

Apseloff's third book, Elizabeth George Speare, published in 1991, focused on the American writer and Newbery Medal winner's works for children, including The Witch of Blackbird Pond and The Sign of the Beaver.

Apseloff contributed articles entitled "Literature for Children" to the World Book Year Book every year from 1984 through 2004.

Selected works

References

  1. https://www.nytimes.com/1984/01/03/science/education-growth-of-kiddie-lit.html "EDUCATION; GROWTH OF 'KIDDIE LIT'"
  2. Web site: ChLA 1973-1983. Gay. Carol. 1983. Children's Literature Association. June 14, 2018.
  3. https://www.snc.edu/northwind/documents/By_genre_or_topic/Death/Death_and_Nonsense_in_the_Poetry_of_George_MacDonald%27s_At_the_Back_of_the_North_Wind_and_Lewis_Carroll%27s_Alice_Books_-_Melody_Green.pdf "Death and Nonsense in the Poetry of George MacDonald’s At the Back of the North Wind and Lewis Carroll’s Alice Books"
  4. https://journals.ala.org/cal/article/download/52/27 "Challenges Then and Now: A Survey of Protagonists in Newbery Award Books, 1950s and 1990s"
  5. Book: Rachel Carroll. Adaptation in Contemporary Culture: Textual Infidelities. 30 November 2009. A&C Black. 978-0-8264-4456-1. 88.
  6. Book: Lance Weldy. Crossing Textual Boundaries in International Children's Literature. 18 January 2011. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 978-1-4438-2760-7. 97.
  7. Book: Philip A. Greasley. Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Volume 1: The Authors. 30 May 2001. Indiana University Press. 978-0-253-10841-8. 239.
  8. Book: Julie Cross. Humor in Contemporary Junior Literature. 14 December 2010. Taylor & Francis. 978-1-136-83986-3. 186.
  9. Book: Tom Burns. Children's Literature Review: Excerpts from Reviews, Criticism, and Commentary on Books for Children and Young People. 8 April 2005. Cengage Gale. 978-0-7876-6777-1. 191.
  10. 1991. Awards and Scholarships. Children's Literature Association Quarterly. 1991. 56. 10.1353/chq.1991.0025. 204430700 .
  11. Behrmann. Christine. October 1989. All About Nonsense. School Library Journal. 35. 14. 29.
  12. Israel. Callie. 1990. Professional Reading: Nonsense Literature for Children. Emergency Librarian. 17. 4. 43.
  13. Tulloch, B. (2015). A spoonful of silly: Examining the relationship between children's nonsense verse and critical literacy (thesis). University of British Columbia.
  14. Shortsleeve. Kevin. 2002. Edward Gorey, Children's Literature, and Nonsense Verse. Children's Literature Association Quarterly. 27. 1. 27–39. 10.1353/chq.0.1442. 144756269 .
  15. Book: Joseph T. Thomas. Poetry's Playground: The Culture of Contemporary American Children's Poetry. 2007. Wayne State University Press. 978-0-8143-3296-2. 144.
  16. Apseloff. Marilyn. 1979. Old Wine in New Bottles: Adult Poetry for Children. Children's Literature in Education. 10. 4. 194–202. 10.1007/BF01143035. 145743022.
  17. Book: Julia Mickenberg. Lynne Vallone. The Oxford Handbook of Children's Literature. 29 November 2012. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-993855-1. 206.
  18. Book: Apseloff, Marilyn Fain. Book Review Digest. 1989. H.W. Wilson Company. 53.
  19. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/246749225 They Wrote for Children Too. WorldCat report
  20. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/633579664 "Elizabeth George Speare"

External links