000 01956 a2200313 4500
001 1032563524
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008 250324022025GB 12 eng
020 _a9781032563527
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037 _bTaylor & Francis
_cGBP 145.00
_fBB
040 _a01
041 _aeng
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072 7 _aLIT000000
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072 7 _a305.231097309034
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100 1 _aLucia Hodgson
245 1 0 _aBiopolitics of Childhood in the Long American 19th Century
250 _a1
260 _aOxford
_bRoutledge
_c20250228
300 _a248 p
520 _bThis edited collection contends that the figure of the child is foundational to the workings of biopolitical power yet remains undertheorized. The study of nineteenth-century biopolitics offers a theoretical framework that promises to increase our understanding of how modern democracies manage their subjects. Recent scholarship has invigorated interrogations into forms of state governance that operate at the level of population, a biological phenomenon defined as a group of individuals linked by racialized fictions of biological commonality. This collection seeks to recognize and position critical childhood studies as essential to these interrogations. The essays theorize the role of representations of children and childhood as tools of biopolitical governance in America in the long nineteenth century. They variously explore how the interrelated and overlapping qualities integral to our understandings of the child and childhood are readily deployed by biopolitical power. The collection is organized into three sections that illustrate how these qualities enable the sorting of human beings into populations targeted for reform, exploitation, and disposal.
700 1 _aAllison Giffen
_4B01
999 _c8090
_d8090