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Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Hearing Children's Voices: Conceptual and Methodological Challenges by Nell Musgrove, Carla Pascoe Leahy and Kristine Moruzi
Part I: Children's Letters and Correspondence
Chapter 2
Children's Voices in the Boy's Own Paper and the Girl's Own Paper, 1800-1900 by Shih-Wen Sue Chen and Kristine Moruzi
Chapter 3
Where 'Taniwha' met 'Colonial Girl': The Social Uses of the Nom de Plume in New Zealand Youth Correspondence Pages, 1880-1920 by Anna Gilderdale
Chapter 4
"Dear Monsieur Administrator": Student Writing and the Question of 'Voice' in Early Colonial Senegal by Kelly Duke Bryant
Chapter 5
"Str[a]ight from My Heart": Black Lives, Affective Citizenship, and 1960s American Politics by Susan Eckelmann Berghel
Part II: Images of the Self
Chapter 6
Children's Art: Histories and Cultural Meanings of Creative Expression by Displaced Children by Mary Tomsic
Chapter 7
Karen B., and Indigenous Girlhood on the Prairies: Disrupting the Images of Indigenous Children in Adoption Advertising in North America by Allyson Stevenson
Chapter 8
'Share the Shame': Curating the Child's Voice in Mortified Nation! by Kate Douglas
Part III: Remembered Voices
Chapter 9
Oral Histories and Enlightened Witnessing by Deidre Michell
Chapter 10
"Basically you were either a mainstream sort of person or you went to the Leadmill and the Limit": Understanding Post-War Youth Culture through Oral History by Sarah Kenny
Part IV: Speaking Back to Institutions
Chapter 11
Muffled Voices: Recovering Children's Voices from England's Social Margins by Greg T. Smith
Chapter 12
Revolutionary Successors: Deviant Children and Youth in the People's Republic of China, 1956-1966 by Melissa Brzycki
Chapter 13
Lost and Found: Counter-Narratives of Dis/Located Children by Frank Golding and Jacqueline Z. Wilson.
Hearing Children's Voices: Conceptual and Methodological Challenges by Nell Musgrove, Carla Pascoe Leahy and Kristine Moruzi
Part I: Children's Letters and Correspondence
Chapter 2
Children's Voices in the Boy's Own Paper and the Girl's Own Paper, 1800-1900 by Shih-Wen Sue Chen and Kristine Moruzi
Chapter 3
Where 'Taniwha' met 'Colonial Girl': The Social Uses of the Nom de Plume in New Zealand Youth Correspondence Pages, 1880-1920 by Anna Gilderdale
Chapter 4
"Dear Monsieur Administrator": Student Writing and the Question of 'Voice' in Early Colonial Senegal by Kelly Duke Bryant
Chapter 5
"Str[a]ight from My Heart": Black Lives, Affective Citizenship, and 1960s American Politics by Susan Eckelmann Berghel
Part II: Images of the Self
Chapter 6
Children's Art: Histories and Cultural Meanings of Creative Expression by Displaced Children by Mary Tomsic
Chapter 7
Karen B., and Indigenous Girlhood on the Prairies: Disrupting the Images of Indigenous Children in Adoption Advertising in North America by Allyson Stevenson
Chapter 8
'Share the Shame': Curating the Child's Voice in Mortified Nation! by Kate Douglas
Part III: Remembered Voices
Chapter 9
Oral Histories and Enlightened Witnessing by Deidre Michell
Chapter 10
"Basically you were either a mainstream sort of person or you went to the Leadmill and the Limit": Understanding Post-War Youth Culture through Oral History by Sarah Kenny
Part IV: Speaking Back to Institutions
Chapter 11
Muffled Voices: Recovering Children's Voices from England's Social Margins by Greg T. Smith
Chapter 12
Revolutionary Successors: Deviant Children and Youth in the People's Republic of China, 1956-1966 by Melissa Brzycki
Chapter 13
Lost and Found: Counter-Narratives of Dis/Located Children by Frank Golding and Jacqueline Z. Wilson.