Trauma of abandoned children: the case of nobody knows (Japan) and tâm hồn mẹ (Vietnam)
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Abstract
This article examines the trauma and ways of presenting trauma of children abandoned by their parents in the Japanese film Nobody Knows (Hirokazu Kore-edam, 2004) and the Vietnamese film Tâm hồn mẹ (Pham Nhue Giang, 2011). The article points out that the two films have created a narrative model in presenting the trauma of abandoned children. Specifically, the two films depict being abandoned as the cause of children's physical and mental injuries; presenting flashbacks and fantasies as manifestations of trauma; building old soul children as a resistance to the trauma of abandonment; presenting heartless mothers - a very unconventional sub-narrative - and indifferent society as the cause of trauma; portraying making friends as an expression of and also a way to heal from trauma. In addition, to show the characters' trauma, the two films create shabby, neglected spaces in the middle of a bustling city. That narrative model has some differences with real-life cases of abandoned children, but that difference helps the film speak out a unique voice about the trauma of abandoned children.
