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Killing Children in British Fiction

Thatcherism to Brexit

de

Type
Studies
Sujet
Countries
Mots Clés
Great Britain, children
Année d'édition
Editeur
State University of New York Press
1ere édition
2024
Langue
anglais
Taille d'un livre de poche 11x18cmTaille relative de ce livreTaille d'un grand livre (29x22cm)
Taille du livre
Format
Paperback304 pages
6 x 9 inches (15 x 23 cm)
ISBN
978-1-4384-9956-7
Appréciation
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Description de l'ouvrage:
Investigates how British fiction and film use dangerous and endangered children to explore conflicts over the future, from the Thatcher to Brexit eras.

This book stems from a simple yet disturbing observation: contemporary British fiction is full of children killing or being killed. Thoughtfully considering novels and films, alongside actual murder cases and moral panics, Dominic Dean develops this insight into a complex account of British cultural history, from the Thatcher to Brexit eras. Killing Children in British Fiction argues that the figure of the child provides means for negotiating, and hence for understanding, recent crises in Britain and their intersections with broader transnational conflicts. The book explores works from major British authors such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Ian McEwan, Doris Lessing, Sarah Waters, Alan Hollinghurst, and Peter Ackroyd; emerging writers such as David Szalay and Melissa Harrison; and filmmakers, including Stanley Kubrick, Nicholas Roeg, Robin Hardy, Derek Jarman, and Remi Weekes. Bridging and often challenging existing scholarship in childhood studies, literary studies, psychoanalysis, and critical and queer theory, Dean shows how the child, at once materially present and representative of an insecure future, can provoke relentless fantasies, fears, and, most troublingly, acts of real violence by adults.

À propos de l'auteur :
Dominic Dean is Course Tutor and Senior Research Quality and Impact Manager at the University of Sussex.

Revue de Presse:
"An authoritative, acute, and insightful book on a highly distressing and important topic. Dean sets cultural representations of child killers and abusers into a wider social and political context and makes a powerful case for child killing as an index of our times." — Robert Eaglestone, author of Truth and Wonder: A Literary Introduction to Plato and Aristotle

"Dean charts a fascinating history of the end of neoliberalism told through the figure of the child. Refusing the essentializing terms in which ideas about children are often posed, Dean instead argues that the child might be pressed to service in any one of several different kinds of political and ideological projects. Their very intransigence and opacity compel and resist adult knowledge and direction, ultimately posing a problem for all political projects that rely on them." — Rebekah Sheldon, author of The Child to Come: Life after the Human Catastrophe

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