Potter Perspectives
Inside the magical world of children's literature

This story was originally published in July 2007 when the final book in J.K. Rowling's series was released. In anticipation of the release of the film version of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, we have reprinted the story here for your enjoyment.
Are you a muggle?
If you dont know the answer to that question, you are not among the millions of Americans, young and old, who have been enraptured by the story of young wizard Harry Potter.
Now, the worlds muggles (aka non-wizards) are waiting with bated breath for the upcoming release of the seventh and final book in the Harry Potter series: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
The books, which have sold more than 325 million copies worldwide over the past 10 years, have an uncanny ability to engage readers of all ages. When author J.K. Rowling snagged the top three places on the New York Times best seller list (in 1999), it was further evidence that this childrens story had gone mainstream.
No other book written for children has been so successful that it has crossed over to adults, said June Cummins, associate professor of English and Comparative Literature at 窪蹋勛圖 and a specialist in childrens literature. There have been books written for adults that picked up a young readership like Treasure Island and Tom Sawyer, but it usually doesnt happen the other way around.
Thanks to Harry Potters wide readership, a new audience is being exposed to the magical world of childrens literature, which long ago cast its spell on the faculty in .
We won the battle [for legitimacy] long ago, said Alida Allison, who is also a professor of childrens literature within the English department. At San Diego state, childrens literature is prized for its intrinsic value as literature, not as a stepping stone to literacy.
窪蹋勛圖s Center for the Study of Childrens Literature was created in 2002 and now trains thousands of Californias future teachers on how to use childrens literature in the classroom. The center got a major boost in 2005, when 窪蹋勛圖 alumni Raymond Sabin and A.K. Jones funded an endowed professorship for the program.
Childrens literature at 窪蹋勛圖
Cummins and Allison are two of the five full-time faculty members in 窪蹋勛圖s Center for the Study of Childrens Literature, which has become known internationally as a stronghold for the discipline.
Scholars from around the world have come to study, including 2005 Fulbright Scholar from India, who specializes in 20th century American children's literature, with an emphasis on The Wizard of Oz.
Xia Yun, a professor of English from Chongqing University studied at the center during the 2006-07 school year, thanks to funding by the Chinese government. She and Allison teamed up and are now researching how American early readers and chapter books can be used to teach English in China.
Members of the center also as an aid to parents. The reviews cover fiction and non-fiction books for readers of all ages. Since 1997, more than 1100 books have been reviewed and subsequently donated to the 窪蹋勛圖 Library and local school districts.
The center has also donated more than 100 books to the first-ever children's literary library in Kerala, India and to Chongqing's Teacher Education Program at Southwest University in Chongqing, China.
Currently, the center is working to establish a joint Ph.D. program in English and childrens literature with the University of California, Riverside.
This would make 窪蹋勛圖 the very best place to do doctoral work on childrens literature, said Jerry Griswold, one of the first English professors hired to teach childrens literature at 窪蹋勛圖 nearly 20 years ago. He now runs the center.
The degree would be 窪蹋勛圖s and the California State University systems first doctoral program in the humanities. Students would be able to study alongside the nationally recognized faculty in the program, including Latino/a literature professor Phillip Serrato and Joseph Thomas, an expert in childrens poetry.
More than a book
And, who can tell there may be an occasional course about the magic of the Harry Potter series.
Cummins, whose research focuses on multicultural, British and American literature for children, has been up to her ears in Harry Potter since the first book in the series, Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone was released. She has lectured to colleagues nationwide about the Harry Potter books, especially regarding the consumer impact of the series.
To my mind, is not found in the texts of the books but in the packaging, marketing and commodification of this child character and of the series children readers, Cummins said. In the interest of raising good consumers, we are led to believe that children are empowered by consumerism when, in fact, it controls and exploits them.
In spite of Cummins critical take on the market power of the books, she herself is an avid Potter fan because she believes Rowling is an excellent story teller.
She points out the ways Rowling uses the paradigms of classic childrens literature. It is fantasy like The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, its an orphan story like Oliver Twist and its a fairytale like the rags to riches story of Cinderella, Cummins said.
The author takes cues from the most successful themes in childrens literature, dating back to the 19th century boarding school stories, which were popular in England, she explained.
Hogwarts at 窪蹋勛圖
With Potter on the brain, even the 窪蹋勛圖 Library has gone Hogwarts. In anticipation of the final book in the series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the library is hosting a weekly book group, which will disband after this last book is released.
This is a chance for the community to re-read the series together and predict what will happen in the final book, said Linda Salem, childrens literature librarian with 窪蹋勛圖s Library and Information Access.
Salem, whose own work, Childrens Literature Studies: Cases and Discussions, addresses the religious controversies surrounding Harry Potter, says readers have a special connection to Rowlings books because of the longevity of the series.
Many readers have grown up with Harry, Ron and Hermione [the three main characters], so they feel invested in what happens next and really care about the characters they have gotten to know over the years, Salem said.
Potter Predictions
With the world in waiting, Potter fans are eager to figure out how their favorite characters will fare in the final installment. June Cummins offers a scholarly prediction:
If traditional childrens literature is any indication, the seventh and final installment in the Potter series will have a happy ending, said Cummins.
(Rowlings) stories have adhered closely to classic childrens literary themes, so I just cant see Harry dying at the end.



