“…Post-structuralist theory focuses on the different gender discourses available in a given social context and on the way in which children learn gender in their daily interactions. In this context, it is understood that they can practice diverse or even contradictory discourses of gender, resisting, at times, the discourses of dominant masculinity and femininity (Kostas, 2018;Rodríguez & Peña, 2005). Post-structuralist theory suggests that children do not act as passive readers, reproducing dominant gender discourses, but, in their interaction with literature, they explore new gender discourses (Änggård, 2005;Bartholomaeus, 2016;Dallacqua, 2019;Davies, 1989;Jackson, 2007).…”