ABSTRACT

Bringing together new perspectives in childhood studies and animal studies, this book is the first collection to critically address the manifold alignments and frequent co-constitutions of children and pets in our families, our cultures, and our societies. The cultural politics of power shaping relationships between children, pets, and adults inform the wide range of essays included in this collection, as they explore issues such as protection, discipline, mastery, wildness, play, and domestication. The volume use the frequent social and cultural intersections between children and pets as an opportunity to analyze institutions that create pet and child subjectivity, from education and training to putting children and pets on display for entertainment purposes. Essays analyze legal discourses, visual culture, literature for children and adults, migration narratives, magazines for children, music, and language socialization to discuss how notions of nationalism, race, gender, heteronormativity, and speciesism shape cultural constructions of children and pets. Examining childhood and pethood in America, Europe, Asia, and the Pacific, this collection shows how discourses linking children and pets are pervasive and work across cultures. By presenting innovative approaches to the child and the pet, the book brings to light alternative paths toward understanding these figures, leading to new openings and questions about kinship, agency, and the power of care that so often shapes our relationships with children and animals. This will be an important volume for scholars of animal studies, childhood studies, children’s literature, cultural studies, political theory, education, art history, and sociology.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

The Cultural Politics of Childhood and Pethood

part I|88 pages

Family, Language, and Nationhood

chapter 1|18 pages

Adoption, Custody, and Protection

The Childhood of Pets as a Critique of Legal Classification Systems

chapter 2|17 pages

Transgressing the “Luggage” Metaphor

Children and Pets as Migrants in the Context of Contemporary International Mobility from Poland to Norway

chapter 3|18 pages

Who Needs Protection and Discipline?

Children, Pets, and Nationalism in the Early Twentieth-Century Ottoman and Turkish Lands

chapter 4|15 pages

Pets as Vehicles of Language Socialization

Encouraging Children’s Emotional, Moral, and Relational Development in Japanese

chapter 5|20 pages

Moamahi ā Pua‘a Moe Poli

Nā Keiki a nā Hānaiāhuhu i ka Mo‘omeheu Hawai‘i (Cherished Chickens to Chest-cuddled Pigs: Children and Pets in Hawaiian Culture)

part II|89 pages

Literature for Children and Adults

chapter 6|17 pages

Pullman, Pets, and Posthuman Animals

The Dæmon-child of His Dark Materials

chapter 7|14 pages

Domesticating Dorothy

Toto’s Role in Constructing Childhood in The Wizard of Oz and Its Retellings

chapter 8|15 pages

Mister Dog Is a Conservative

Representations of Children and/as Animals in Three Little Golden Books

chapter 9|14 pages

“Oh God, Give Me Horses!”

Pony-Mad Girls, Sexuality, and Pethood

chapter 10|15 pages

“The cats are outside hanging”

Settler Colonialism, Racialized Animality, and Queer Kinship in Lois-Ann Yamanaka’s Blu’s Hanging

chapter 11|14 pages

Doomed Creatures

Children and Nonhuman Animals in Contemporary Southern African Fiction in English

part III|67 pages

Music and Visual Culture

chapter 14|19 pages

“The Values of Savagery”

Pathologies of Child and Pet Play in Avant-Garde Visual Culture

chapter 15|14 pages

The Best Friend

Exploring the Power Relations of the Child-Pet Co-Construction in Children’s TV Programs