Congress Report: 21st Biennial Congress in Maastricht, The Netherlands
Children's Literature and Media Cultures
10-14 August, 2013
Maastricht, The Netherlands
Convenor: Elisabeth Wesseling
Committee Members: Karin Wenz, Karen Ghonem, Helma van Lierop, Vanessa Joosen, Rose-May Pham Dinh, Roos Wolters, Lidwien Hollanders, Wilma Lieben
Keynote Speakers: Professor Adriana Bus, Universiteit Leiden, The Netherlands; Professor Junko Yokota, National-Louis University, USA; Professor Kerry Mallan, Queensland University of Technology, Australia; Professor Gudrun Marci-Boehncke, Technische Universiteit Dortmund, Germany; Professor Jackie Marsh, University of Sheffield, UK
Sponsors: Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, the Dutch Science Foundation (NWO), Stichting Lezen (Dutch Reading Foundation), Municipality of Maastricht, University Foundation Limburg (SWOL)
The Maastricht Congress
2013 Congress Sign at Entrance
Congress Venue
The 21st IRSCL Congress was held at the Business School Building at Maastricht University in Maastrict, The Netherlands. The Business School Building is a nineteenth-century monastery that has been restructured for teaching purposes. It accommodates spacious lecture halls as well as a large amount of seminar rooms that are equipped with cutting edge ICT facilities for DVD, CD, TV, USB, powerpoint beamers and screens, and internet access. Catering for the conference took place in the Economics Cafeteria, which adjoins a spacious garden. The Congress was convened by Elisabeth Wesseling who was assisted by dedicated scientific and organizing committees.
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Maastrict University Business Building
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Maastricht Town Hall
Academic and Social Program
This conference aspired towards the following two aims:
We wanted to enhance the ongoing scholarly dialogue between children's literature studies and media studies.
We wanted to create a bridge between empirical and hermeneutic approaches to children's texts and associated media.
We wanted to avoid compartmentalization of attendance along national lines.
I am confident to say we have met all our aims. First of all, in order to facilitate the creation of liaisons between scholars from different fields of expertise and geographical regions, it is imperative that one creates a stimulating social environment which makes delegates feel welcome and at ease, so they can concentrate all of their attention on content and contacts, rather than on practicalities. We have seen to this by:
Selecting a spacious and attractive venue, with a suitable cafeteria and adequate ICT facilities and support
Organizing high quality catering, including two conference dinners in inspirational and appropriate surroundings (Bookstore Polaris, the municipal library)
Offering an attractive cultural program where people can mix and mingle, i.e. a reception, a lecture by a children's author, a film program
Having a service-oriented crew at hand throughout the conference
Seeing to the aesthetic side of things (posters, conference bags, etc. in an attractive lay-out)
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Lecture by Bart Moeyart at Bookshop Dominicanen
Second, we paid special attention to the nationalities of delegates when we composed the panels, making sure we mixed contributors from diverse geographical backgrounds, thereby also mixing their prospective audiences.
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Audience watching keynote presentation by Kerry Mallan
Third, we selected our keynotes in such a way that a good balance between empirical and hermeneutic approaches was achieved, Jackie Marsh and Adriana Bus working within a social science framework, Gudrun Boehncke operating within interdisciplinary literacy paradigms, while Kerry Mallan and Junko Yokota represented text-oriented approaches. None of the keynotes, however, are confined to "their box"; all five are capable of looking beyond and very much aware of alternative approaches to the subject at hand, and capable of reflecting on the pros and cons of different approaches, which is what Adriana Bus and Yunko Yokota did very explicitly in their lectures.
Fourth, we actively acquired and subsequently organized papers in such a way that empirical and hermeneutic approaches were represented in a balanced way throughout the conference.
Gudrun Marci-Boehncke delivering her keynote
Fifth, children's literature studies and media studies mingled quite spontaneously through the strong focus on matters of adaptation and remediation addressed by a great many conference papers. Quite a few delegates did not only discuss how content crosses the borders between media but also between cultures. This was very strong point of the conference, I feel, because the rather cosmopolitan IRSCL provides an ideal forum for this sort of work.
Sixth, we have made a concerted effort to select appropriate moderators, who were knowledgeable about the sessions they chaired. This also makes a difference, we feel, and is well worth spending time on.
Prepared by Elisabeth Wesseling
Opening Remarks of 2013 IRSCL Congress
Keynote by Junko Yokota - "What Works Well Where When? How Various Qualities of Digital and Print Picture Books Shape Reader Response"
Keynote by Gudrun Marci-Boehncke - "Children's and Young Adult's Literature in a Digitized World: Cultural and Political Preconditions for Literary Education"
Keynote by Adriana Bus - "Electronic Storybooks for three- to six-year-olds: Putting Reading in Jeopardy?"
Past Congress Reports
2023 Santa Barbara, California, USA - Ecologies of Childhood
2021 Santiago, Chile - Aesthetic and Pedagogic Entanglements
2019 Stockholm, Sweden - Silence and Silencing in Children's Literature
2017 Toronto, Canada - Possible & Impossible Children: Intersections of Children's Literature & Childhood Studies
2015 Worcester, United Kingdom - Creating Childhoods: Creation and (Re)-Interpretation through the Body, Histories and the Arts
2013 Maastricht, The Netherlands - Children's Literature and Media Cultures
2011 Brisbane, Australia - Fear and Safety
2009 Frankfurt, Germany - Children's Literature and Cultural Diversity in the Past and the Present
2007 Kyoto, Japan - Power and Children's Literature: Past, Present and Future
2005 Dublin, Ireland - Expectations and Experiences: Children, Childhood and Children's Literature
2003 Kristiansand, Norway - Telling a World, Shaping a World.