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"Oh, Why Can't You Remain Like This Forever!": Children's Literature, Growth, and Disability
Author(s) -
Teresa Michals,
Claire McTiernan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
disability studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2159-8371
pISSN - 1041-5718
DOI - 10.18061/dsq.v38i2.6107
Subject(s) - afterlife , trope (literature) , rhetoric , fantasy , gesture , aesthetics , sociology , gender studies , psychoanalysis , psychology , history , literature , art , philosophy , linguistics
One of the foundational gestures of the disability rights movement was the rejection of the common description of people who live with physical or mental impairments as "eternal children." This paper argues that the contradictions inherent in applying this trope to adults amplify the contradictions inherent in applying it to children themselves. From its heyday in in the 19th-century "Golden Age" of children's literature to its afterlife in 20th-century disabling rhetoric, the fantasy of childhood as stasis requires denying the fact of growth.

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