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Listening to British Child Migrants’ Voices: A New Concept for Studying the History of Young People

Event information>

Dates

This is a past event
Time
5:30 pm to 7:00 pm
Location

Hybrid | Online-via Zoom & IHR Wolfson Room NB01, Basement, IHR, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU

Institute

Institute of Historical Research

Event type

Seminar

Event series

Life-Cycles

Speakers

Susanne Quitmann (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich)

Contact

Email only

Using the example of children and juveniles sent to Canada and Australia under the British child migration schemes (1869–1970), I propose ‘voice’ as a useful concept for studying the history of young people. Critiquing the use of voice as a self-explanatory metaphor for the authentic self or the democratic empowerment of a liberal subject, I reconceptualise voice by distinguishing four interconnected transforming processes – raising, recording, archiving, and excavating voices – and by considering the different dimensions and forms of voices. I take into account the dimensions of sound, narrative, and practice, and consider the forms of Mitsprache, speech, singing, writing, and bodily performance. In doing so, I am able to gain new insights into the development of ideas about young people and young people’s rights over the course of the late nineteenth and the twentieth century, as well as into how British child migrants perceived, navigated, and communicated their experiences and into their construction of new identities in the process.

All welcome

- this seminars is free to attend but registration is required.

This page was last updated on 20 December 2024