Stephen
King is one of the twentieth centuries’ most prolific and well-known American
authors. King’s work brought modern horror and the supernatural to mainstream
audiences in 1974 with the publication of his first novel, Carrie, a
coming-of-age story about a bullied and lonely girl who discovers she has a
real and deadly power. One of the defining features of Stephen King’s oeuvre is
his use of children and childhood in his novels and short stories. A King
childhood is often framed within the horrors of the adult world--the dangers of
uninhibited technology, abusive parents, the supernatural, or other strange or
frightening circumstances--or the horrors of childhood itself.
In a King
narrative, children are often left unprotected and vulnerable while facing
unimaginable threats. King’s use of child characters within the framework of
horror (or of horrific childhood) raises questions about adult expectations of
children, childhood, the American family, child agency, and the nature of fear
and terror for (or by) children. Childhood in King’s work is often set within
the mythos of small town America and the idealized spaces that have become
emblematic of a pastoral or “proper” Western childhood. Such myths are then
challenged or shattered by events that question notions of innocence, purity,
reality, and American exceptionalism.
This
collection’s goal is to examine childhood throughout Stephen King’s works, from
his early novels and short stories, through film adaptations, to his most
recent publications. The ways King presents, complicates, challenges, or
terrorizes children and notions of childhood provide a unique lens through
which to view historically, philosophically, or theoretically, American
cultural and familial or adult anxieties about children and childhood.
The
collection seeks submissions that examine children and childhood from a variety
of perspectives in the works of Stephen King, including his novels, novellas,
short stories, and films or television adaptations of his works. Submissions
are welcome from a variety of disciplines, and from multiple theoretical, or
philosophical perspectives. International submissions are welcome.
Some
suggested topics include, but are certainly not limited to:
- Misfit children
- Child as monstrous
- Lost children
- Child victim/Child as victimizer
- Bullying and bullies
- Isolated/isolating children
- Childhood culture (among children)
- Adult anxieties and children
- Fear and/in/of children
- Children and the supernatural
- Child hero/anti-hero
- Child savior
- Parenting/parenthood
- Death and the Child
- Gender
- Race
- Cruelty to or by children
- The American family and the child
- The child and authority (school, government, i.e. The Shop)
- Play (dangerous and otherwise)
- Sexuality
- Pedophilia
- Freaks and the nature of Freakishness
- Sacrificial children
- Nostalgia and horror
- Nature of reality for children
Contributors
please send a 300-400 word abstract, full contact information, and a brief
biography (30-50 words) to Dr. Debbie Olson at debbieo@okstate.edu by July 1,
2018. Full essays will be due by March
1, 2019. Please note that citations should be in Chicago notes/bibliography
style.
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