Book launchWednesday 29 January 2025
6:00pm – 7:00pm
British Children’s Literature in Japanese Culture
Drinks reception: 7:00pm – 8:00pm
13/14 Cornwall Terrace, Outer Circle (entrance facing Regent's Park), London NW1 4QP
Organised by the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation
Whether watching Studio Ghibli adaptations of British children’s books, visiting Harry Potter sites in Britain or eating at Alice in Wonderland-themed restaurants in Tokyo, the Japanese have a close and multifaceted relationship with British children’s literature. In British Children’s Literature in Japanese Culture, the first comprehensive study to explore this engagement, Catherine Butler considers its many manifestations in print, on the screen, in tourist locations and throughout Japanese popular culture.
Taking stock of the influence of literary works such as Gulliver’s Travels, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, The Tale of Peter Rabbit, Tom’s Midnight Garden, and the Harry Potter series, this lively account draws on literary criticism, translation, film and tourist studies to explore how British children’s books have been selected, translated, understood, adapted and reworked into Japanese commercial, touristic and imaginative culture. Using theoretically informed case studies this book will consider both individual texts and their wider cultural contexts, translations and adaptations (such as the numerous adaptations of British children’s books by Studio Ghibli and others), the dissemination of distinctive tropes such as magical schools into Japanese children’s literature and popular culture, and the ways in which British children’s books and their settings have become part of the way that Japanese people understand Britain itself.
In this book launch for the paperback edition, Catherine Butler introduced the book and talked about the interests and discoveries that led to its writing.
A recording of the presentation can be viewed here:
About the contributor

Professor Catherine Butler
Catherine Butler is Professor of English Literature at Cardiff University, where she specialises in children’s literature, fantasy and literary theory. Her academic books include Four British Fantasists: Place and Culture in the Children’s Fantasies of Penelope Lively, Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones and Susan Cooper (2006), Reading History in Children’s Books (with Hallie O’Donovan, 2012), Literary Studies Deconstructed: A Polemic (2018), and British Children’s Literature in Japanese Culture: Wonderlands and Looking-Glasses (2023), as well as several edited collections, the latest of which (on Richard Adams’ Watership Down) will appear in 2025. She has also published six novels for children and teenagers. Catherine is Editor-in-Chief of Children’s Literature in Education.