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Låt romanen komma in – Transformativt lärande i gymnasieskolans litteraturundervisning
Jönköping University, School of Education and Communication, HLK, Learning Practices inside and outside School (LPS), Communication, Culture & Diversity @ JU (CCD@JU).ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8660-8620
2020 (Swedish)Licentiate thesis, monograph (Other academic)Alternative title
Let the novel in – Transformative learning and the teaching of literatureat upper secondary school (English)
Abstract [sv]

“Låt romanen komma in – Transformativt lärande i gymnasieskolans litteraturundervisning“ är en litteraturdidaktisk studie i forskningsämnet pedagogik som tar syftestexten för litteraturundervisningen i det gymnasiala svenskämnet som utgångspunkt. Genom en förstudie där elva svensklärare och en skolbibliotekarie samtalar i fokusgrupper riktas projektet mot sitt huvudfokus som är en läsloggsintervention där 31 elever i gymnasiekursen Svenska 3 läser John Ajvide Lindqvists “Låt den rätte komma in” (Ordfront, 2004/2015). Med hjälp av begrepp från läsforskning (Rita Felski, “Uses of Literature”, Blackwell Publishing, 2008) och erfarenheter från förstudien för eleverna logg över sin läsning. Resultatet av läsloggsinterventionen visar att elevernas metareflektion hjälps framåt av begreppsanvändningen och att eleverna därmed tar steget in i en transformativ lärandeprocess. Licentiatavhandlingen innehåller en analys av den didaktiska potentialen för transformativt lärande med fokus på fokalisation och främmandegöring i Ajvide Lindqvists roman samt en praktisk modell för hur begreppsorienterad litteraturundervisning med läslogg på gymnasiet kan utformas.

Abstract [en]

The function of reading fictional texts in Swedish secondary school education has been questioned in public debate (e.g. Melin, 2016-07-17), even though the reading of fictional texts has been shown to be important to young people’s academic achievement (Jerrim & Moss, 2019). Swedish policy documents clearly state that upper secondary teaching of literature in the subject of Swedish is aimed at increasing the pupils’ self-awareness and their comprehension of experiences and perceptions of others (The Swedish National Agency of Education, 2011). However, results from a large-scale reading project show that Swedish teenagers find it difficult to reflect upon their own roles as readers of fictional texts (Nordberg, 2018). Therefore, this licentiate thesis targets upper secondary reading of fictional texts, and the possibility of using literary terminology pedagogically to visualize and develop pupils’ transformative learning processes. The overall research question posed is:

- How can applied literary terminology be used in upper secondary literary studies todevelop pupils’ transformative learning processes?

A pilot study was conducted based on three focus group-sessions with teachers and the librarian at an upper secondary school. The main study was based on reading journals written by pupils reading John Ajvide Lindqvist’s novel Låt den rätte komma in (2004) [Let the Right One In, 2008] as part of the Swedish 3 course. The methodological framework is inspired by participatory research. Consequently, this research-project uses an inclusive approach to the participants – 11 Swedish teachers, 1 librarian and 31 pupils – which means that they are considered as subjects rather than objects of knowledge. My own role in this project is tripartite: as a colleague, a teacher, and researcher. The pilot study was conducted in order to find out which possibilities and obstacles arose when the staff participants worked on teaching literature. The main study, within which the pupils are included as participants, focuses on advancing meta-perspectives of their own reading and made use of results from the pilot study and concepts derived from Felski’s (2008) ‘modes of textual engagement’.

The pilot study revealed tensions which obstruct the teaching of literature, including the teacher-experienced importance of pupils ‘stepping into’ stories, as opposed to a great many pupils’ reluctance both towards the text and the act of reading. Moreover, the tension between engaged reading and the heavy emphasis placed on assessable outcomes of teaching and learning was addressed by the teachers. The main study revealed that reluctance is an inherent part of reading fictional texts. Further, that the pedagogical application of concepts used in literary studies can support the reading process, make it move forward, encourage the adoption of meta-perspectives on reading and on the pupils themselves as readers, as well as supporting a cohesive view of the finalized text.

In summary, the findings suggest that applying literary concepts in literary studies supports pupils towards advancing their transformative learning and potentially points to a new way of making the goals section of the policy documents tangible for teaching and learning practices. According to this study, transformative learning-goals can be achieved if critical perspectives are preceded by individual engagement with the reading of the text. The suggested concept of transformative potential is beneficial to an analysis of the pedagogical function of a certain fictional text used in a certain learning situation geared towards transformative learning. This finding stands in contrast to trends of using reading as a means of writing practice or imaging historical epochs.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Jönköping: Jönköping University, School of Education and Communication , 2020. , p. 174
Series
Forskningsrapporter från Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation ; 016
Keywords [en]
literature teaching and learning, transformative learning, phronesis, ‘didactic potential’, estrangement effect, Verfremdungeffekt, upper secondary school, John Ajvide Lindqvist
National Category
Didactics General Literature Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-48406ISBN: 978-91-88339-33-1 (print)ISBN: 978-91-88339-34-8 (electronic)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hj-48406DiVA, id: diva2:1430619
Presentation
2020-06-17, Seminariet håll digitalt via Zoom, Jönköping University, School of Education and Communication, Jönköping, 13:00 (Swedish)
Opponent
Supervisors
Note

Licentiate Thesis in Education with Specialisation in Didactics.

Available from: 2020-05-15 Created: 2020-05-15 Last updated: 2026-05-08Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Självet – Texten – Världen: Subversiv litteraturundervisning för transformativt lärande
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Självet – Texten – Världen: Subversiv litteraturundervisning för transformativt lärande
2026 (Swedish)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [sv]

”Självet – Texten – Världen: Subversiv litteraturundervisning för transformativt lärande” är en sammanläggningsavhandling bestående av fyra studier genomförda i (direkt anslutning till) gymnasieskolans litteraturundervisning. Genom fokusgruppssamtal med lärare och skolbibliotekarier och klassrumsstudier i kursen Svenska 3 utforskas hur litteraturens och läsningens transformativa potentialer kan förverkligas i undervisning som bygger på läsloggar och begrepp avsedda att synliggöra både det lästa verkets inneboende egenskaper och vad som händer i läsningen.

Transformativt lärande innebär omförhandling av invanda, ofta outtalade, föreställningar och litteraturundervisning som är subversiv visar alternativ i och till instrumentellt präglad utbildning. Genom att prioritera verk från olika delar av världen kan förståelse byggd på flera sinsemellan motstridiga perspektiv bidra till att det transformativa lärandet både breddas och fördjupas på sätt som stärker såväl enskild omdömesgillhet som gemensam bildning i rörelse. Avhandlingen erbjuder praktiknära perspektiv på gymnasieskolans litteraturundervisning och framhåller det litteraturdidaktiska forskningsfältet som en möjlig arena för prefigurativa alternativ till pedagogisk strömlinjeformning.

Abstract [en]

This thesis focuses on subversive literature teaching and learning in Swedish Upper Secondary School. That is, rather than directing education towards easily assessed, measured, and ticked off criteria, the thesis explores how reflective judgement and Bildung can be brought to the forefront of education through literature teaching which encourages the experience and use of multiple perspectives. Such teaching aims at initiating and maintaining learning processes which sensitize students to their own presumptions, and, by extension, challenge and transform their views of themselves, literature, and the world.

Methodologically, the four studies of the thesis adhere to the umbrella term participatory research (PR). PR sets out to include the experience and views of research participants – teachers, librarians, and students – as valuable resources to all parts of the research process. Also, PR seeks to make the research relevant to the participants, who are seen as subjects rather than objects of knowledge, and their practice area. In three out of four studies, focus group sessions with teachers and school librarians have been either part of preparing classroom interventions, or the main research method. The classroom interventions have been conducted as part of the students’ regular coursework to create realistic research conditions. These interventions focus on the use of reading journals and other written reflection fora, subject specific terminology, and frames of reference. The studies target: 1) students’ readings of Let the Right One In (Ajvide Lindqvist, 2004); 2) teachers’ experiences of initiating and being part of a local reading promotion project; 3) students’ readings of curriculum excerpts and two short stories by Gao (“The Cobbler and His Daughter”, 1983) and Salih (“A Handful of Dates”, 1966) respectively; and 4) students’ readings of Season of Migration to the North (Salih, 1966).

The focus group transcripts and journal-/reflection-outcomes have been thematically analyzed in a back-and-forth process between collecting and reading data, writing the research outputs, and returning to data, inspired by the method presented and amended by Braun and Clarke (Braun & Clarke, 2006; Braun et al., 2019). Aligning with the key aspect of PR to contribute to the field of practice, reports back to participants have been given both during and after the writing and publishing processes. In addition, an autoethnographic lens has been applied in retrospect, to bring further transparency to the relationship between the researcher and the participants, and to ethical considerations.

The major findings of the studies show that students and teachers experience that transformative learning can be strengthened using subject specific terminology, which focuses on both the works read and students’ reading processes. By using reading journals and subject specific terminology, students can gain knowledge about themselves (as readers), literature, and the world. Moreover, the results show that orchestrating literature teaching and learning situations, which promote reflective judgement as part of collective and progressive Bildung, does not have to be complicated, if the works read and taught offer both recognition and outlooks on the world, as well as prepare for estrangement effects through their literary structures. However, such subversive literature teaching needs to manage student antagonism or listlessness caused by a sense of futility towards education which is not instrumentally connected to short-term assessment and grading. The thesis displays a possible way to counter such reluctance by treating it as a reading mode amongst others and encouraging students to explore it as such throughout their reading processes.

In conclusion, this thesis makes clear that literature itself – with all its diversions and detours from the route to instant meritocratic rewards – must be put in a pivotal position in the classroom, since it carries both the potentials and limits for what is possible to achieve. Even though there is institutional support in the curriculum for teaching aimed at multiple perspectives which open for transformative learning, it is necessary to orient literature teaching and research towards development of practices to fully implement these aims. Precisely because explorative and transformative literature teaching and learning does not fit with hegemonic school efficiency practices, it can lead the subversive way to reflective judgement and collective Bildung.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Jönköping: Jönköping University, School of Education and Communication, 2026. p. 151
Series
Doktorsavhandlingar från Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation, ISSN 1652-7933 ; 049
Keywords
Bildung, Literature Teaching and Learning, Participatory Research, Transformative Learning, Upper Secondary School
National Category
Pedagogy Didactics
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-71314 (URN)978-91-88339-89-8 (ISBN)978-91-88339-90-4 (ISBN)
Public defence
2026-06-16, Hc218, Högskolan för lärande och kommunikation, Jönköping, 10:00 (Swedish)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2026-05-08 Created: 2026-05-08 Last updated: 2026-05-11Bibliographically approved

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