ABSTRACT

In the light of the complex demographic shifts associated with late modernity and the impetus of neo-liberal politics, childhood continues all the more to operate as a repository for the articulation of diverse social and cultural anxieties. Since the Thatcher years, juvenile delinquency, child poverty, and protection have been persistent issues in public discourse. Simultaneously, childhood has advanced as a popular subject in the arts, as the wealth of current films and novels in this field indicates. Focusing on the late twentieth and the early twenty-first centuries, this collection assembles contributions concerned with current political, social, and cultural dimensions of childhood in the United Kingdom. The individual chapters, written by internationally renowned experts from the social sciences and the humanities, address a broad spectrum of contemporary childhood issues, including debates on child protection, school dress codes, the media, the representation and construction of children in audiovisual media, and literary awards for children’s fiction. Appealing to a wide scholarly audience by joining perspectives from various disciplines, including art history, education, law, film and TV studies, sociology, and literary studies, this volume endorses a transdisciplinary and meta-theoretical approach to the study of childhood. It seeks to both illustrate and dismantle the various ways in which childhood has been implicitly and explicitly conceived in different disciplines in the wake of the constructivist paradigm shift in childhood studies.

section I|68 pages

Childhood in Contemporary British Literature and Literary Criticism

chapter 2|16 pages

The Adult within the Literary Child

Reading Toby Litt’s deadkidsongs as an Anti-Bildungsroman

chapter 3|17 pages

The Child Narrator in Contemporary British Fiction and Literary Criticism

The Case of Stephen Kelman’s Pigeon English

section II|66 pages

Medial and Visual Constructions of Childhood in Contemporary Britain

chapter 6|17 pages

An Inconvenient Growth

Watching Child Actors, Growing Up, Sideways and Backwards in Contemporary British Film and Television

chapter 7|17 pages

Adults Looking at Children

Books, Bodies and Buying in Children’s Book Covers 1

section III|39 pages

Historical and Social Dimensions of Childhood in Contemporary Britain

chapter 9|19 pages

Childcare for the Under-Fives in Post-1945 England

Contemporary Reflections on Past Childhoods

chapter 10|20 pages

Contingent Connections

Between German and British Childhoods – Marion Daltrop

section IV|55 pages

Contemporary British Childhoods between Rights and Regulations

chapter 11|19 pages

The Politics of Child Protection in Contemporary England

Towards the ‘Authoritarian Neoliberal State’

chapter 12|20 pages

Dressing up for School

Beyond Rights and Welfare