ABSTRACT

This volume contributes to understanding childhoods in the twentieth and twenty-firstcentury by offering an in-depth overview of children and their engagement with the violent world around them. The chapters deal with different historical, spatial, and cultural contexts, yet converge on the question of how children relate to physiological and psychological violence.

The twentieth century has been hailed as the "century of the child" but it has also witnessed an unprecedented escalation of cultural trauma experienced by children during the two World Wars, Holocaust, Partition of the Indian subcontinent, and Vietnam War. The essays in this volume focus on victimized childhood during instances of war, ethnic violence, migration under compulsion, rape, and provide insights into how a child negotiates with abstract notions of nation, ethnicity, belonging, identity, and religion. They use an array of literary and cinematic representations—fiction, paintings, films, and popular culture—to explore the long-term effect of violence and neglect on children. As such, they lend voice to children whose experiences of abuse have been multifaceted, ranging from genocide, conflict and xenophobia to sexual abuse, and also consider ways of healing.

With contributions from across the world, this comprehensive book will be useful to scholars and researchers of cultural studies, literature, education, education policy, gender studies, child psychology, sociology, political studies, childhood studies, and those studying trauma, conflict, and resilience.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|9 pages

Poof! up in Smoke

A modern fairy tale*

chapter 2|15 pages

Colours of Trauma Paint a Thousand Words

"Leaving Tibet" in paintings by Tibetan children in India

chapter 3|13 pages

War Babies

chapter 4|12 pages

"Waiting for My Mum to Come Back" 1

Trauma(tic) narratives of Australia's stolen generation

chapter 5|13 pages

Drawing an Account of Herself

Representation of childhood, self, and the comic in Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis

chapter 6|18 pages

Cache-Cache

Writing childhood trauma

chapter 7|9 pages

Negotiating Trauma

The child protagonist and state violence in Midnight's Children and Cracking India

chapter 8|12 pages

Quest into the past

Heroic quest and narrative of trauma in Jane Yolen's Briar Rose

chapter 9|18 pages

Et Tu, Brute?

The child soldier and the child victim in Shobasakthi's Traitor

chapter 10|16 pages

Children at War

Child(hood) trauma in popular Japanese animation

chapter 11|12 pages

Returning Horror, Re-Visioning Real

Children and trauma in Grave of the Fireflies

chapter 12|14 pages

Coping With Killing?

Child soldier narratives and traces of trauma

chapter 13|12 pages

We Needed the Violence to Cheer US

Losses and vulnerabilities in Ishmael beah's A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier

chapter 14|8 pages

Children of the Trail

The trauma of removal and assimilation

chapter 15|15 pages

Child/Hood and 9/11 Trauma

A study of Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close