Can a state policy toward children and children’s experiences be analyzed using hauntology? In his blog post, Michal Korhel attempts to do so by examining the example of Czech-German children in post-WWII Czechoslovakia. As their national identity was ambiguous, these children challenged the Czechoslovak authorities’ efforts to create a nationally homogenous state of Czechs and Slovaks. From a hauntological perspective, Czech-German children can be seen as being possessed by German ghosts. Before they could become members of Czech society, the state authorities had to rid them of those ghosts.

Link to the blog post you can find here.