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Child and Youth Agency in Science Fiction

Travel, Technology, Time
Editors:
Publisher:
 2019

Summary

Child and Youth Agency in Science Fiction: Travel, Technology, Time intersects considerations about children’s and youth’s agency with the popular culture genre of science fiction. As scholars in childhood studies and beyond seek to expand understandings of agency in children’s lives, this collection places science fiction at the heart of this endeavor. Retellings of the past, narratives of the present, and new landscapes of the future, each explored in science fiction, allow for creative reimaginings of the capabilities, movements, and agency of youth. Core themes of generation, embodiment, family, identity, belonging, gender, and friendship traverse across the chapters and inform the contributors’ readings of various film, literature, television, and virtual media sources. Here, children and youth are heterogeneous, and agency as a central analytical concept is interrogated through interdisciplinary, intersectional, intergenerational, and posthuman analyses. The contributors argue that there is vast power in science fiction representations of children’s agency to challenge accepted notions of neoliberal agency, enhance understandings of agency in childhood studies, and further contextualize agency in the lives, voices, and cultures of youth.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2019
ISBN-Print
978-1-4985-9738-8
ISBN-Online
978-1-4985-9739-5
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
294
Product type
Edited Book

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
    2. Acknowledgments No access
    3. Introduction: Girl Zombies and Boy Wonders: The Future of Agency is Now! No access
    1. Chapter One: “Why Are You Keeping This Curiosity Door Locked?”: Childhood Subjectivities and Play as Conflict Resolution in the Postmodern Web Series Stranger Things No access
    2. Chapter Two: “It Was a Wonder I Was Even Born”: Reversing the Technical Performance of Childhood in Back to the Future No access
    3. Chapter Three: In the Shadow of the Claw: Jubilee, X-23, and the Mutated Possibilities of Youth Agency across Generations in the World of the X-Men No access
    1. Chapter Four: Biker Gangs and Boyhood Agency in Akira No access
    2. Chapter Five: From Tribute to Mockingjay: Representations of Katniss Everdeen’s Agency in the Hunger Games Series No access
    3. Chapter Six: The Yoke of Childhood: Misgivings about Children’s Relationship to Technology in Contemporary Science Fiction No access
    4. Chapter Seven: “Ship Wars” and the OTP: Narrating Desire, Literate Agency, and Emerging Sexualities in Fanfiction of The 100 No access
    1. Chapter Eight: A Pedagogy of Childhood Agency: Teaching Power of Youth in the Ender Universe No access
    2. Chapter Nine: Sanctuary and Agency in Young Adult Dystopian Fiction No access
    3. Chapter Ten: The Emergence of Agency after Bionuclear War: Posthuman Child—Animal Possibilities No access
  1. Afterword: The Children of Wonder No access Pages 273 - 282
  2. Index No access Pages 283 - 288
  3. About the Editors No access Pages 289 - 290
  4. About the Contributors No access Pages 291 - 294

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