What is the difference between a lie and a fantasy, when the subject
is a child? Moving between literary and scientific texts, Sally
Shuttleworth explores a range of fascinating issues that emerge when
the inner world of the child becomes, for the first time, the explicit
focus of literary and medical attention. Starting in the 1840s, which
saw the publication of explorations of child development by Bronte and
Dickens, as well as some of the first psychiatric studies of
childhood, this groundbreaking book progresses through post-Darwinian
considerations of the child's relations to the animal kingdom, to
chart the rise of the Child Study Movement of the 1890s. Based on
in-depth interdisciplinary research, The Mind of the Child offers
detailed readings of novels by Dickens, Meredith, James, Hardy and
others, as well as the first overview of the early histories of child
psychology and psychiatry. Initial chapters cover issues such as fears
and night terrors, imaginary lands, and the precocious child, while
later ones look at ideas of child sexuality and adolescence and the
relationship between child and monkey. Experiments on babies, the
first baby shows, and domestic monkey keeping also feature. Many of
our current concerns with reference to childhood are shown to have
their parallels in the Victorian age: from the pressures of school
examinations, or the problems of adolescence, through to the
disturbing issue of child suicide. Childhood, from this period, took
on new importance as holding the key to the adult mind.
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Child Development in Literature, Science, and Medicine 1840-1900
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191576881
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter