Ambivalent childhoods: speculative futures and the psychic life of the child
Material type:
- 9781517908225
- 155.410973 B7A6
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 5-A / Slot 158 (0 Floor, West Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 155.410973 B7A6 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 204387 |
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Wish for Childhood
1. Disavowing Black Childhood: Trayvon Martin, Adolescent Citizenship, and Anti-Blackness
2. Transphobia as Projection: Trans Childhoods and the Psychic Brutality of Gender
3. Desiring the Child: Queerness, Motherhood, and the Analyst
4. Undocumented Dream-Work: Intergenerational Migrant Aesthetics and the Parricidal Violence of the Border
Afterword: Ambivalence and Loss
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
The concept of childhood contains many contested and ambivalent meanings that have extraordinary implications, particularly for those staking their claim for belonging and justice on the wish for inclusion within it. In Ambivalent Childhoods, Jacob Breslow examines contemporary U.S. social justice movements (including Black Lives Matter, transfeminism, queer youth activism, and antideportation movements) to discover and reveal how childhood operates within and against them.
Ambivalent Childhoods brings together critical race, trans, feminist, queer, critical migration, and psychoanalytic theories to explore the role of childhood in shaping and challenging the disposability of young black life, the steadfastness of the gender binary, the queer life of children’s desires, and the precarious status of migrants. Through an engagement with “the psychic life of the child” that combines theoretical discussions of childhood, blackness, transfeminism, and deportability with critical readings of films, narrative, images, and social justice movements, Breslow demonstrates how childhood requires sustained attention as a complex and ambivalent site for contesting the workings of power, not only for the young.
Ambivalent Childhoods is a forward-thinking and intersectional analysis of how childhood affects activism, national belonging, and the violence directed against queer, trans, and racialized people.
https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/ambivalent-childhoods
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