This article brings Shane Meadows’ Dead Man's Shoes (2004) into dialogue with the history of the depiction of the child on film. Exploring Meadows’ work for its complex investment in the figure of the child on screen, it traces the limits of the liberal ideology of the child in his cinema and the structures of feeling mobilised by its uses – at once aesthetic and sociological – of technologies of vision
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Boyhood Studies. The d...
This article will focus in on one short play spell in the outdoor space of a classroom of 2-year-old...
This article presents the rationale for ‘found childhood’, a crossdisciplinary project mobilising th...
This article turns to Shane Meadow’s film This is England (2006) to describe the impact that losing ...
Inspired by Erin Manning’s use of Marey’s photography to explore time and movement, this article wor...
This paper explores the latent political meanings of cinematic representations of capitalist childho...
This article explores the emotional impact on the viewer of disturbing and disorienting images of in...
This Is England is social realist film portraying racism and poverty in 1980s Britain through the ey...
Taking László Nemes’ film Son of Saul (2015) as both an aesthetic intervention into the public remem...
This book brings together a host of internationally recognised scholars to provide an interdisciplin...
Translated into English for the first time by Madeline Whittle, Emmanuel Siety’s article draws exten...
The child has existed in cinema since the Lumière Brothers filmed their babies having messy meals in...
Children in front of the camera in nonfictional situations are fascinating and often unusually affec...
The article examines the figure of the ‘lost child’ in feature films of the immediate post-war perio...
This is the full published version of this article as first published in the Canadian Journal of Fil...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Boyhood Studies. The d...
This article will focus in on one short play spell in the outdoor space of a classroom of 2-year-old...
This article presents the rationale for ‘found childhood’, a crossdisciplinary project mobilising th...
This article turns to Shane Meadow’s film This is England (2006) to describe the impact that losing ...
Inspired by Erin Manning’s use of Marey’s photography to explore time and movement, this article wor...
This paper explores the latent political meanings of cinematic representations of capitalist childho...
This article explores the emotional impact on the viewer of disturbing and disorienting images of in...
This Is England is social realist film portraying racism and poverty in 1980s Britain through the ey...
Taking László Nemes’ film Son of Saul (2015) as both an aesthetic intervention into the public remem...
This book brings together a host of internationally recognised scholars to provide an interdisciplin...
Translated into English for the first time by Madeline Whittle, Emmanuel Siety’s article draws exten...
The child has existed in cinema since the Lumière Brothers filmed their babies having messy meals in...
Children in front of the camera in nonfictional situations are fascinating and often unusually affec...
The article examines the figure of the ‘lost child’ in feature films of the immediate post-war perio...
This is the full published version of this article as first published in the Canadian Journal of Fil...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Boyhood Studies. The d...
This article will focus in on one short play spell in the outdoor space of a classroom of 2-year-old...
This article presents the rationale for ‘found childhood’, a crossdisciplinary project mobilising th...