
Imagined Orphans: Poor Families, Child Welfare, And Contested Citizenship in London (Series in Childhood Studies) (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)
Lydia Murdoch
With his dirty, tattered clothes and hollowed-out face, Oliver Twist is the enduring symbol of the young indigent spilling out of orphanages and haunting the streets of late-nineteenth-century London. Although poor children were often portrayed as real-life Oliver Twists—either orphaned or abandoned by unworthy parents—they in fact frequently maintained contact and were eventually reunited with their families.
In Imagined Orphans, Lydia Murdoch focuses on this discrepancy between the representation and the reality of children’s experiences within welfare institutions—a discrepancy that she argues stems from conflicts over middle- and working-class notions of citizenship that arose in the 1870s and persisted ... Read more
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About Lydia Murdoch
Reviews for Imagined Orphans: Poor Families, Child Welfare, And Contested Citizenship in London (Series in Childhood Studies) (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)
Susan L. Tananbaum
Department of History, Bowdoin College
Murdoch explores the ways in which melodramatic incitement of pity for allegedly orphaned children worked to demonize the poor in Victorian England. This insight flies ... Read more