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An Introduction...

When we look back at our childhood, it is perhaps the cakes we had on our birthdays or the ice creams we ate in the heat of the summer that we remember the most. It is fitting that this is reflected within the many texts written specifically for children. The works of Children’s Literature are saturated with food imagery, and it is the desire and/or consumption of these sweet foods that play a significant role within the texts.

Chocolate, sweets, and cake can be allowed or forbidden, consumed in excess or only dreamt of. They can illustrate sin and vice, further the fantastical, and act as a motivator for good or bad behaviour in such a way that savoury food does not. Typically, sweet foods are marketed specifically for children and so are valued and coveted by them. Therefore, this blog shall explore the various different portrayals and representations of sweet foods in Children’s Literature.


Starting with stories written in the nineteenth century and working all the way to present day, I will be looking at the presence and various functions of food in fictional texts and cookbooks, as well as consulting older family members to gain an insight in to the foods they enjoyed as a child. I will combine this with some culinary creations of my own, taken from recipe books old and new in order to understand the great appeal that sweet foods have for children. 

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