(精神)健康状况:第二次世界大战后犹太"无人陪伴儿童"的形象

IF 0.5 Q3 CULTURAL STUDIES
R. Clifford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章使用了一群大屠杀幸存儿童的照片——所谓的“林菲尔德儿童”,他们来自萨里郡林菲尔德的威尔·考特尼养老院——来探索幸存者儿童的照片在战后早期是如何被使用的。它认为,这些图像反映了对一代“被战争破坏”的欧洲儿童的更广泛的焦虑,在他们对快乐和安定的幸存者儿童的自我意识描绘中,他们介入了战后关于“正常”童年参数的辩论。这些图像表明,战后重建的过程被认为是心理和身体的康复,儿童精神健康恢复的图像反映了战后的一些关切:对战后民主稳定的担忧,对人道主义援助作用的新理解,对欧洲犹太人种族灭绝的早期理解,以及公众对儿童精神分析和儿童发展问题日益增长的兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Picture of (Mental) Health: Images of Jewish ‘Unaccompanied Children’ in the Aftermath of the Second World War
This article uses photographs of a group of child Holocaust survivors – the so-called ‘Lingfield children’ from the Weir Courtney care home in Lingfield, Surrey – to explore how images of survivor children were deployed in the early postwar period. It argues that these images responded to broader anxieties about a generation of ‘war-damaged’ European children, and in their self-conscious portrayal of happy and settled survivor children, they intervened in postwar debates about the parameters of a ‘normal’ childhood. These images suggest that processes of reconstruction after the war were understood to be as much about psychological as physical healing, and that images of children recovering in mental health spoke to a number of postwar concerns: fears about the stability of postwar democracies, new understandings of the role of humanitarian aid, early understanding of the genocide of Europe’s Jews, and growing public interest in child psychoanalysis and issues of child development.
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CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
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