Kata Kita: Journal of Language, Literature, and Teaching
Vol. 13 No. 3 (2025)

Children’s Agency in Jory John’s The Good Egg

Shirleen Felicia Limantara (Unknown)
Liliek Soelistyo (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Dec 2025

Abstract

In recent decades, American children's literature has increasingly highlighted children’s agency, reflecting broader cultural shifts toward recognizing children's autonomy and decision-making abilities. This paper analyzes the exercises of agency and the triggers behind them in a picture book titled The Good Egg by Jory John. Drawing on Bandura’s Agency Theory, we analyze the exercises of agency done by the main character and the triggers that caused them to exercise it. The analysis reveals that the Good Egg exercises his agency by making proactive commitments, future planning, self-regulation and motivation, and self-reflection. While his agency initially appears rigid, often rooted in idealized or externally influenced standards, it gradually evolves into a more reflective form. In addition, he exercises his agency after being triggered by his past experiences. Ultimately, the main character’s exercise of agency, including the triggers behind them, illustrates ways for young readers to use agency in their daily lives.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

sastra-inggris

Publisher

Subject

Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media

Description

Kata Kita is a journal dedicated to the publication of students research in the areas of literature, language, and teaching. In the study of language, it covers issues in applied linguistics such as sociolinguistics, discourse analysis, critical discourse analysis, pragmatics, sylistics, corpus ...