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Category Archives: Alexia Raynal

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In childhood, we press our nose to the pane, looking out—

July 7, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

In memories of childhood, we press our nose to the pane, looking in. “The day I Left My Son In The Car” is a self-exploratory article that details Kim Brooks’s experience with the juvenile court system. Brooks, the author, explains how the decision to leave her 6-year-old child in the car for five minutes led her through two years of involvement in the court system after being accused of contributing to the delinquency of a minor (i.e., she left the kid in need of services). […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: childhood, children, memories, parenting

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Changing the plot: victims of incest

June 30, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

For those of us who grew up with the Disney characters, artist Saint Hoax’s “Princest Diaries” series might be extremely off-putting. In an effort to create sexual assault awareness (or else, to re-write history based on visual lies), the Middle Eastern artist shows Disney’s princesses being forced to kiss their fathers. The disturbing images use the corruption of a somewhat common childhood fantasy—being a princess—to bring light to the true horror of domestic sexual abuse: a majority of child victims are assaulted by family […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: art, childhood, children, rape, sexuality

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Revisiting the problem with protecting the innocent

June 23, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Last winter I quoted, inspired by the sexual undertone in Balthus’s paintings of children at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, an article about the negative consequences of equating childhood with innocence. In “Who Are You Kidding? Children, Power, and the Struggle Against Sex Abuse,” Jenny Kitzinger criticizes people’s tendency to describe childhood as an innocent time and space for at least two reasons: [1] If defiling the pure and deflowering the virgin is supposed to be erotic, then focusing […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: Balthus, child prostitution, childhood, children, immigrant children, innocence, sexuality

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All Hail Child Savior!

June 16, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Children are usually seen as adults in the making. Because they are “unfinished,” children represent hope. While this is often a valid source of inspiration for many, it is also the misfortune of others. Children’s potential to become something makes people (adults) believe that through them change is possible. This couldn’t be more visible today than in the news coverage about the impact of Juan Carlos’s resignation as king of Spain. An article from AFP (Madrid) explains that for 8-year-old Leonor de Borbón y […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: childhood, children

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Migration of the Innocents

June 9, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

A series of images of young children in a crowded US Border Patrol facility in Texas has been circulating the web since they leaked into conservative news and opinion website Breibart.com last week. The images show hundreds of immigrants—most of them Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan children and minors—shoved in windowless rooms as they await for instructions. In an article featured in WLRN (We Learn) titled “How Central American Kids Gave Us A Reality Check,” Miami-based journalist Tim Padget reports on this issue by mocking […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: childhood, children, immigrant children, immigration, politics

1

I’m not allowed to be bored

June 2, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Managing children’s boredom Adam Phillips makes a good point about the way adults feel and manage children’s boredom. In On Kissing, Tickling and Being Bored: Psychoanalytic Essays of the Unexamined Life (Harvard University Press, 1994), Phillips examines the underlying meaning of people’s preoccupation with boredom. “Is it not indeed revealing,” he asks “what the child’s boredom evokes in the adults?” What concerns us, he suggests, is children’s lack of concern: Heard as a demand, sometimes as an accusation of failure or disappointment, it is rarely agreed […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: Adam Phillips, boredom, childhood, children, families

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Playful children, miniature adults

May 26, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Childhood as a Modern Invention The Metropolitan Museum of Art is featuring an exhibition of Goya’s four portraits of members of the Altamira family. In walking through the exhibition’s small room last Friday, Goya’s paintings of the children and their accompanying labels reminded me of a book I read last year. In The Erosion of Childhood, Valerie Polakow examines the evolving meaning of childhood through time, using text and imagery to explore its changing value. In her early chapters, Polakow asks: Is childhood itself a social invention or is […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: art, childhood, children, gender, Goya, Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Scary pair of floating, pale green pants

May 19, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

(with nobody inside) I know of a legal representation agency that has been fond of playing Universal Pictures’ movie The Lorax (2012) over and over again for their younger clients in the foster system as they sit in the waiting room. While the movie seems disastrous to me, it has nonetheless got me thinking about the role that Dr. Seuss’s books have played (or that adults think they have played) in children’s lives. In Coping With Stress: Effective People and Processess (Oxford University Press, New York: 2001) […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: childhood, children, children's books, Dr. Seuss, poetry

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From economy to emotion: The changing value of children

May 12, 2014 by Alexia Raynal

Jennifer A. Reich’s Fixing Families: Parents, Power, and the Child Welfare System is best know for its robust and compassionate analysis of child protection as a system. Yet in many ways, her book is also about the (ever-changing) value of parenting, families, childhood and childrearing. In just a few lines Reich, introduces the possibility that children’s value, once strictly economic, is now tied to emotional markers. She deconstructs current assumptions about family relationships to explain that: In the last one hundred years, children […]

Categories: Alexia Raynal, ZiR • Tags: childhood, children, families, family court, law, parenting

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