Here are a few resources you might be interested in reading:
- "Critics Question the Representation of Disability in 'Wonder'", School Library Journal 11/11/17
- "Wonder No More: A Look at Book to Screen Adaptation", Fuse 8 blog, by Betsy Bird 11/15/17
- "Wonder is a tear jerker that earns your tears", Entertainment Weekly 11/14/17
In particular, critics are question the choice to use makeup to change actor Jacob Tremblay's appearance to represent Auggie's disability. Betsy Bird contrasts this with the decision made by the directors of Wonderstruck to cast Millicent Simmonds, a child actor who is deaf.
Does using makeup portray Auggie's disability as a costume that one can put on and take off? In my own viewing of the trailer, the movie does not match my imagination as I read the book; I had imagined Auggie's face as looking more impacted by his disability. But I'm not sure that matters.
Regardless, I truly believe these are important questions to ask our children as they watch and talk about the movie and the book.
An excellent resource to follow is Disability in Kid Lit. This blog "is dedicated to discussing the portrayal of disability in middle grade and young adult literature... from the disabled perspective." Their most recent review looks at the portrayal of autism in A Boy Called Bat, a book that many students throughout Berkeley are reading as part of our Mock Newbery Book Clubs.
©2017 Mary Ann Scheuer, Great Kid Books
No comments:
Post a Comment