Lost and othered children in contemporary cinema
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Lanham :
Lexington Books,
c2012.
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Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction / Debbie Olson, Andrew Scahill
- I see dead people: ghost-seeing children as mediums and mediators of communication in contemporary horror cinema / Sage Leslie-McCarthy
- I Can't Go On, I Must Go On: How Jeliza Rose Meets Alice and the Dark Side of Childhood in Terry Gilliam's Tideland / Jayne Steel
- Wednesdays Child: Adolescent Outsiders in Contemporary British Cinema / Stella M. Hockenhull
- Wonka, Freud and the Child Within: (Re) Constructing Lost Childhood in Tim Burton's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory / Adrian Schober
- Representations of Childhood and Conflict in African Fiction Film / Christine Singer and Lindiwe Dovey
- Pity the Child: Exploring Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Gummo (1997) / Sarah E. S. Sinwell
- The Ideal Immigrant is a Child: Michou d'Auber and the Politics of Immigration in France / Nicole Beth Wallenbrock
- It's all for you, Damien!: Oedipal Horror and Racial Privilege in The Omen series / Andrew Scahill
- Little Rebels in Mao's Era: Representing Children of the Past in Zhang Yuan's Little Red Flowers (Yuan Zhang, 2006) / Kiu-wai Chu
- Batteries Have Run Out: Ken Loach's Sweet Sixteen / Gilles Chamerois
- A Krank's Dream: Conflicts Between Form and Narrative in City of Lost Children / Carolyn Salvi
- Childhood, Ghost Images, and the Heterotopian Spaces of Cinema: The Child as Medium in The Others / Christian Stewen
- The Hitchcock Imp: Children and the Hyperreal in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds (1963) / Debbie Olson
- Experiencing H�uz�un Through the Loss of Life, Limbs, and Love in Turtles Can Fly / Fran Hassencahl.