On the global scene, geography books proceed like an exhibition of the trade of all nations. The fictional travelers (or narrator) gather eclectic information about each place, including habitation, family units, food and clothing, exports, and stereotypical behavior. British accounts of different geographies, manners, and governments position their country as the perfect medium between tyranny and democracy, and morally superior to other global powers (evidenced by British abolition and emancipation); likewise, American geographies, such as Harriet Beecher Stowe’s First Geography for Children (1855), bolster cultural similarities with Britain to suggest the United States may also succeed as a global power. In borrowing from adult scientific and geographical accounts, children’s authors taught prevailing theories about race and climate that supported European superiority and British fitness for colonial rule. When describing Africa, for example, Venning’s A Geographical Present (1817) divides the continent into four pieces by exports, then categorizes people by physical appearance, interpreting skin color or head shape as legible markers of moral strengths and weakness (Norcia 2010, pp. 40–60). Where adult travel literature conceals ideology behind a veneer of scientific objectivity, children’s books openly confess their agenda. Thus late-century classics of world geography and history, such as James Hewitt’s Geography of the British Colonies and Dependencies (1869) and Rudyard Kipling and C.R.L. Fletcher’s A School History of England (1911), prove useful for exposing the purposeful development of racist and dehumanizing rhetoric and its dissemination among children groomed for colonial posts (Mangan 1993).
These ideologies are interrogated on occasion. In Evenings with the Children; or, Travels in South America (1871), by Vienna G. Ramsey, an author from an abolitionist Baptist community, Charles questions his mother “by what right” Spanish conquistadors claimed land in Peru, insisting that the Peruvians would have just as much right to “discover” and claim Spain (pp. 60–61). They learn about Palmares, a city established by self-emancipated slaves and destroyed by the Portuguese military, which “teaches us how strong the love of freedom is in the heart of man” (p. 224). Priscilla Wakefield’s Mental Improvement (1794; 1799 American edition), published by the Quaker abolitionist firm Harvey and Darton, interrupts a visit to Liverpool’s shipyards with a lengthy tally of slavery’s evils, then asks children to join the sugar boycott (1799, vol. 1, p. 80). Such critiques most commonly appear in geographies about globally sourced domestic commodities – sugar, coffee, tea, and diamonds – although some authors (e.g. Maria Elizabeth Budden and Rev. Isaac Taylor) avoid condemning abusive practices.
Despite class conflict, racial injustice, and imperial conquest, geography books emphatically pronounce the unity of mankind. As early as William Darton’s Little Jack of All Trades (1814), division of labor and natural resources are credited for cooperation across stations and nations: “Commerce unites men of all countries, and scatters plenty and variety over the earth, … and whilst each individual works for the general good, the whole community works for him” (p. 4). With the invention of telegraphs and the steampress, this sanguine philosophy of free trade evolves to include the free flow information: “the seeds of religion and knowledge are scattered over the globe,” states The Book of Commerce by Sea and Land (1833), and “the researches and discoveries of great men of every nation are brought together for the general benefit and good of mankind” (p. 9). Such optimism may harness family metaphors. “I like looking at a map,” announces the narrator in Emily Taylor’s Glances at the Ball We Live On (1856), “because it makes me think of the number of brothers and sisters we have; for all of us should be but as one family, seeing we are all children of one great and good Parent” (p. 61). Families in geography books may cast foreign countries and colonial conquests as siblings, their conflicts adjudicated by mother Britannia. In Barbara Hofland’s Panorama of Europe (1813), the children dress up as Spain, Ireland, Scotland, etc., and step forward to represent each nation’s character and history (Norcia 2010, pp. 44–48).
Considering the close relationship between map making and world building, it may come as no surprise that many geography, travel, and history books are the seeds of modern fantasy and historical fiction. Edward Lear provides an early instance, with his mock-geography book, The Story of Four Little Children Who Went Round the World (1871). But even didactic works hint that reading about other places may stimulate free play more readily than actual travel. In Ramsey’s Evenings with the Children (1871) the two siblings “travel in imagination” by riverboat and rail from Mexico to Brazil, drawing their journey’s map as their mother details the history and wildlife of each region. Despite having no fictional frame, Peter Parley’s Universal History, on the Basis of Geography (1837), edited by Nathaniel Hawthorne, reminds children that they cannot widely travel and suggests they instead imagine how they might survey the world in a balloon. In late-Victorian accounts, the nursery tableau may replace the mother-as-guide with magic, as with Little Lucy’s Wonderful Globe (1871) by Charlotte Yonge, a prolific author of children’s histories and historical novels. Lucy lives with her parents, siblings, and great-uncle Joseph, a retired ship’s surgeon with an eclectic museum. Their approachable housekeeper, Mother Bunch, a well-traveled sailor’s widow of unknown nationality, tells the children stories and serves cookies shaped like countries. One night while Lucy is confined to the museum with scarlet fever, her curiosity (whether dream or magic) activates objects from the collection, which transport her around the globe to meet children from different cultures, before they all dance about her fireside in a “Dream of All Nations” and celebrate global trade Victorian style, using imagery from the Book of Revelation.
These authors generated the first low fantasy plots to structure their geographies, creating a genre that came to include E. Nesbit’s The Story of the Amulet (1906) and Philippa Pearce’s Tom’s Midnight Garden (1958) (Rahn 1991). By the early twentieth century, the imaginative tradition splits in two, with fantasies and historical fiction distinct from textbooks. Such novels as Little House in the Big Woods – with its episodic descriptions of family activities, rational mother figure, child observer, and adventuresome father storyteller – recognizably adhere to what was once, 50 years earlier, a nonfiction form. Interplay across this genre divide informs the work of Maud and Miska Petersham, illustrators whose Mikki picturebook trilogy (1929) follows a traveling child – while their extensive schoolbook series (e.g. The Story Book of Earth’s Treasures: Gold, Coal, Oil, Iron and Steel [1935]) conforms to the commerce tour formula established a century earlier by Priscilla Wakefield, Mary Elliott, and Jane Marcet.
The award-wining picturebooks of Holling C. Holling likewise have their roots in fantastical “it-narrative” histories, such as Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Whole History of Grandfather’s Chair (1841), which relates the “authentic history” of New England as witnessed by that venerable furniture: “On sturdy oaken legs it trudges diligently from one scene to another, and seems always to thrust itself in the way, with most benign complacency, whenever an historical personage happens to be looking round for a seat.” The trilogy