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"In this book, Choo has defined a serious problem with precision and she has devised a comprehensive and creative solution. She has deftly exposed two dangerous myths: first, the myth that academic scholarship and literature can be value-free; and, second, the myth that learning is a solitary experience. Her solutions show up in the diverse classroom practices which help students learn how to communicate with each other about subtle ideas in literature. She analyzes those practices skillfully and humanely. In doing so she is not only helping a generation create the kind of habits that are urgently needed in a global age, but are need in an electronic age which constantly emphasizes quickness. Choo's approach enriches the reading and teaching of literature that spark conversation and collaboration essential to any thorough understanding of how stories unfold as they do - stories in fiction and stories in daily, real life." - Stephan Ellenwood, Professor at Boston University, USA
"This remarkable book provides a supremely timely reminder of the importance of teaching literature to young people, whilst recognising that we need to argue more emphatically for literature's place in the curriculum. Suzanne Choo inspires teachers and scholars to regain their belief in the fundamental seriousness of literature as an ethical change agent in young people's lives, helping them to see, as no other curriculum area can, that they are part of a global humanity that requires a vision of international, cultural understanding. Literature, she passionately argues, and based on her substantive research in real classrooms, illuminates the world and human behaviour so that young people can enjoy texts and feel the questioning power that literary texts demand, texts invite young people to scrutinise human behaviour and moral integrity. The book includes a remarkable review of literary traditions that have influenced the teaching of literature and finds them all important but with too strong an emphasis on reducing texts to either aesthetic icons or troubling sites of discourse. She draws intensely on her own experiences of the extraordinary richness of the multilingual and cultural diversities of Singapore. There 'English Literature' occupies a significant position for her and for its young people leading to her developing a vision of the ultimate value of all literatures and their extraordinary importance to the ethical development of young people in a post-COVID world." - Andy Goodwyn, Professor at University of Bedfordshire, UK