1st Edition

Bringing Up War-Babies The Wartime Child in Women’s Writing and Psychoanalysis at Mid-Century

By Amanda Jones Copyright 2018
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    The figure of the wartime child in the mid-twentieth century unsettles and disturbs. This book employs a range of material – biographical, literary and historical – to chart some of the surprising and unanticipated crossovers between women’s writing and early psychoanalysis in the years of the Second World War and the decades before and after. This volume includes examples of children’s adventure fiction, as well as works written for adult audiences and important and previously unrecognized similarities are noted.



    The war was a disruptive influence in the lives of all who lived through it. Although active self-censorship is observed in the behaviour and attitudes of adults at this time, this book demonstrates how fictional children are able to articulate feelings such as anxiety and fear that adults were under pressure to conceal or to repress and at times, the figure of the wartime child becomes a surrogate for the writer herself or her suppressed fears and anxiety. When peace returned, this study finds women writers quick to identify and communicate a discomfiting new ambivalence between parents and children.

    1. Adventures and Analysis: Anxiety, Danger and Psychoanalysis in three 1940s Children’s Adventure Novels  2. Containment and Mothering  3. Social Reform, Welfare and the Child at Mid-Century  4. Evacuation and Enuresis: The Chameleon Child  5. Literary Mothers  6. Postwar Parenting and Ambivalence

    Biography

    Amanda Jones was awarded a Ph.D in English Literature by Anglia Ruskin University in 2015. She also writes fiction. She has also written several articles which focus on middlebrow literature and psychoanalytic theory, children's literature and women's writing.