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Written by a team of experts, this fifth volume of A Cultural History of Youth examines youth as both a category and a lived experience, exploring the role of the young within imperial ideology, and the interactions of youthfulness with notions of progress and modernity. This volume analyses the broader social contexts in which the cultural histories of the Age of Empire played out, offering a detailed study of the years 1800-1920, and allowing readers to trace representations and enactments of youth across time.Richly illustrated with images of engravings, maps, newspaper extracts, and contemporary photographs and artwork, this volume offers a detailed study of youth in the Age of Empire, and covers its interactions with themes such as Concepts of Youth; Spaces and Places; Education and Work; Leisure and Play; Emotions; Gender, Sexuality and the Body; Belief and Ideology; Authority and Agency; War and Conflict; and Towards a Global History
David M. Pomfret is Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong. He writes on the history of childhood and youth in Europe and its colonies using transnational and comparative methodologies. He is the author or editor of six books and his most recent monograph, Youth and Empire: Trans-colonial Childhoods in British and French Asia (2016) won the Grace Abbott book prize.
List of IllustrationsNotes on ContributorsGeneral Editor's PrefaceIntroduction1. Concepts of Youth, David Pomfret2. Spaces and Places, Matt Parnell3. Education and Work,: Colin Heywood4. Leisure and Play, Harald Fischer-Tiné5. Emotions,: Kristine Alexander6. Gender, Sexuality and the Body, Corrie Decker7. Belief and Ideology, Sayaka Chatani8. Authority and Agency, Abosede George9. War and Conflict, Jialin Christina Wu10.Toward a World History, Richard Ivan Jobs