Arnold, Lucy ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3707-3409 (2024) Nightmares about Fossils: Spectral Children, Colonial Legacies, and Intergenerational Trauma in the Work of Hilary Mantel. In: The Undead Child in Popular Culture: Representations of Childhoods Past, Present, and Preserved. Routledge, London, pp. 93-113. ISBN eBook: 9781032657660
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Abstract
This chapter analyses the persistence and significance of the motif of the 'spectral child' in the work of British novelist Hilary Mantel, mapping the political and ethical work it does there. From Mantel's debut duology through to her critically acclaimed Tudor Trilogy, the absent presence of the child who is missing, who is dead, who is ignored or marginalised, or who never was seethes. The analysis is focalised through a reading of Mantel's critically overlooked novel A Change of Climate (1994), in which temporal and geographical shifts between 1950s apartheid-era South Africa and the Bechuanaland Protectorate and 1980s Norfolk expose the reader to a number of children whose 'undeadness' (literal and metaphorical) maps the legacies of a variety of imbricated acts of violence and marginalisation.
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Uncontrolled Discrete Keywords: | Hilary Mantel, mourning, haunting, South Africa, Botswana |
Divisions: | College of Arts, Humanities and Education > School of Humanities |
Related URLs: | |
Copyright Info: | © 2025 selection and editorial matter, Craig Martin and Debbie Olson; individual chapters, the contributors |
Depositing User: | Katherine Small |
Date Deposited: | 16 Sep 2024 14:15 |
Last Modified: | 17 Sep 2024 08:53 |
URI: | https://eprints.worc.ac.uk/id/eprint/14265 |
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