1st Edition

The Undead Child in Popular Culture Representations of Childhoods Past, Present, and Preserved

Edited By Craig Martin, Debbie Olson Copyright 2025
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this study of representations of children and childhood, a global team of authors explore the theme of undeadness as it applies to cultural constructions of the child.

    Moving beyond conventional depictions of the undead in popular culture as living dead monsters of horror and mad science that transgress the borders between life and death, rejuvenation, and decay, the authors present undeadness as a broader concept that explores how people, objects, customs, and ideas deemed lost or consigned to the past might endure in the present. The chapters examine nostalgic texts that explore past incarnations of childhood, mementos of childhood, zombie children, spectral children, images and artefacts of deceased children, as well as states of arrested development and the inability or refusal to embrace adulthood. Expanding undeadness beyond the realm of horror and extending its meaning conceptually, while acknowledging its roots in the genre, the book explores attempts at countering the transitory nature of childhoods.

    This unique and insightful volume will interest scholars and students working on popular culture and cultural studies, media studies, film and television studies, childhood studies, gender studies, and philosophy.

     

     Introduction

    Craig Martin and Debbie Olson

    1.     “Silk is a Child’s Skin: Marx, Engels, and the Modern Moloch”                                \

    Jayson Althofer

     2.     “‘That canal gees me the creeps’: Haunted Bodies of Water and Geographies of Dead Childhood in the Cinema of Lynne Ramsay”

    Jack Anderson

     3.     “Beyond Zombies: Resurrected Young People and Incongruity in Les Revenants, The Returned (US) and Resurrection”

    Karen Beeler

     4.     “White Futures Only: Racialized Undeadness in The Last of Us”

     Lucas Cober

     5.      “Not Quite Dead: The Function of Ghost Children in William Mumler’s Spirit Photography”

    Marion Tempest Grant

     6.     “Nightmares about Fossils: Spectral Children, Colonial Legacies and Intergenerational Trauma in the Work of Hilary Mantel”

    Lucy Arnold

     7.     “Taken from Life”: Lewis Carroll’s Photographic Memory and the Cur(s)ing of Sleeping Beauties Sent to Wonderland

    Maryna Matlock

     8.     Fraught and Fragile Domesticity: Visions of the Undead Child(hood) in Walter de la Mare’s Broomstick

    Toni Thibodeaux

     9.     “Written on the Body: Traumatic Encounters with the Dead Child in Sharp Objects (HBO, 2018)”

    Nonie May

     10.  “But You’re Just a Girl”: The Haunting Specter of Childhood in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

    Eloise Ross      

     11.  “Undead Child, Undead Parents: ‘Honor Crime’ and Matricide in Yashar Kemal’s To Crush the Serpent”

    Hivren Demir-Atay 

     12.  “‘They Never Come Back ... as Boys’: The Necropolitics of Hitler's Children in Disney's Pinocchio (1940) and Education for Death (1943)”

    Craig Martin

    Biography

    Craig Martin teaches screen studies in the Department of Film, Games and Animation at Swinburne University of Technology, Australia.

    Debbie Olson is an Associate Professor of English at Missouri Valley College, USA.