The Educational Functions of the First Woman's Almanac in Britain: Media Literacy and The Ladies' Diary, 1704-1713

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  • Tytuł: The Educational Functions of the First Woman's Almanac in Britain: Media Literacy and The Ladies' Diary, 1704-1713
  • Autor/Autorzy: ANNA MIEGOŃ (Autor)
  • Nazwa czasopisma: Multidisciplinary Journal of School Education
  • Rok: 2020
  • e-ISSN: 2543-8409
  • DOI: 10.35765/mjse.2020.0918.08
  • Adres www:: https://czasopisma.ignatianum.edu.pl/jpe/article/view/1588/1717
  • Strony od-do: 157-168
  • Język: angielski
  • Abstrakt: While 18th-century almanacs transmitted usable information that was meant to be relevant to daily life, at the beginning of the century they also began to function as an educational tool that enabled readers to act as pro­ducers of media content, and, as a result, to develop media literacy via the practice of writing and responding to amateur poetry. In this article, I define media literacy as a cultural category shaped by specific media-related skills: the creation, interpretation, evaluation, and negotiation of media content. I examine John Tipper's The Ladies'Diary (1704-1713), one of the bestselling almanacs of the era, as an educational tool that, through the strategy of inviting and publishing amateur poetry, promoted and taught media competencies.Tipper's almanac, I argue, should thus be acknowledged as an influential document in the history of media education.
  • Dyscyplina: literaturoznawstwo

MARC

  • 002 $a The Educational Functions of the First Woman's Almanac in Britain: Media Literacy and The Ladies' Diary, 1704-1713
  • 003 $b 0000-0002-9436-1207
  • 003 $a ANNA MIEGOŃ (Autor)
  • 004 $a Oryginalny artykuł naukowy
  • 006 $a Multidisciplinary Journal of School Education
  • 008 $a 2020
  • 012 $a 2543-8409
  • 013 $a 10.35765/mjse.2020.0918.08
  • 014 $a https://czasopisma.ignatianum.edu.pl/jpe/article/view/1588/1717
  • 015 $a 157-168
  • 017 $a angielski
  • 020 $a While 18th-century almanacs transmitted usable information that was meant to be relevant to daily life, at the beginning of the century they also began to function as an educational tool that enabled readers to act as pro­ducers of media content, and, as a result, to develop media literacy via the practice of writing and responding to amateur poetry. In this article, I define media literacy as a cultural category shaped by specific media-related skills: the creation, interpretation, evaluation, and negotiation of media content. I examine John Tipper's The Ladies'Diary (1704-1713), one of the bestselling almanacs of the era, as an educational tool that, through the strategy of inviting and publishing amateur poetry, promoted and taught media competencies.Tipper's almanac, I argue, should thus be acknowledged as an influential document in the history of media education.
  • 966 $a literaturoznawstwo
  • 985 $a Wydział Pedagogiczny
  • 985 $b Instytut Neofilologii

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  • Licence: CC BY-ND 4.0
  • Text version: Final published
  • Availability: Published