Children's literature aimed at young children poses a unique challenge for an individual attempting to analyze a work of fiction. Normally, the student of fiction can quote from the text with a reasonable expectation that the attitude of the text can be conveyed to the reader of the essay. Simply by reading the selected, quoted passage the reader of the essay ought to get a sense of the book. However, when discussing a picture book, conveying the tone of a work becomes more difficult because the illustrations and the words are inexorably linked. Often, to a very young or pre-literate child reading the book, the pictures are even more important than the words.
The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales (featuring "Little Red Running Shorts" as one of its tales) was written by Jon Sciezka and illustrated by Lance Smith. It is an interesting example of this phenomenon of how in much of children's literature; a text cannot be separated by the illustrations that accompany it. It is an elaborately illustrated picture book, and the illustrations critically impact the way that the reader experiences the text. It is also a parody of certain elements of children's literature and of fables and thus it contains elements that can only be understood by an adult. The jokes both function on a literal level that pander to children and delights children with grossness and misbehavior. It also delights adults in the cleverness it shows in making fun of the morality of children's tales. Yet for both children and adults, they must see what is depicted as well as read the words to understand the book's intentions.
Reading to children is often thought of as an intellectually or morally 'improving' activity. But The Stinky...
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