Picturing Childhood: The Myth of the Child in Popular Imagery
By (Author) Patricia Holland
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
23rd January 2004
United Kingdom
Adult Education
Non Fiction
Media studies
Cultural studies
305.23
Paperback
232
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 19mm
295g
Whether controversial or taken for granted, pictures of children are everywhere - in magazines, newspapers and advertisements, on greetings cards and the Internet. "Picturing Childhood" demonstrates how these familiar images reveal a view of childhood which is constantly changing. With debates over children's rights in the 1970s, child sexual abuse in the 1980s, violent children in the 1990s and precocity and consumerism in the 2000s, the traditional image of childhood innocence survives only as a form of kitsch. Using images from a wide variety of sources, this text considers the popular imagery in relation to news, education, welfare, charity and consumerism and asks what implications does all this have for the ways in which children themselves are treated
"Patricia Holland has a huge, eclectic collection of pictures of children and a terrific project: to write a serious commentary on the nature of childhood based on her collection... the many teachers and other educators who read this book, as I hope they will, must do their own thinking about what it means for them...this book comes as an unsettling professional challenge...Reading it, we must ask ourselves some difficult questions..." Mary Jane Drummond - University of Cambridge (The Times Higher Education Supplement)
Pat Holland is a freelance writer, lecturer and researcher in the history of television, photography and representations of childhood. Her publications include 'Family Snaps' (as co-editor), 'The Television Handbook' and forthcoming from I.B. Tauris, a study of 'This Week' and television current affairs.