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Imagining children otherwise : theoretical and critical perspectives on childhood subjectivity / Michael O'Loughlin & Richard T. Johnson editors.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Rethinking childhood ; v. 46.Publisher: New York : Peter Lang, 2010Description: xii, 247 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1433110172
  • 9781433110177
  • 1433110180
  • 9781433110184
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 155.4 22
LOC classification:
  • BF721 .O555 2010
Contents:
Foreword / Marianne Bloch -- Introduction: occupying the Twilight Zone as a space of possibility / Michael O'Loughlin -- Reading, writing, and the wrath of my father / Jonathan G. Silin -- Mā Wai He Kapu Tī? : Being, knowing, and doing otherwise in early childhood education in Aotearoa / Jenny Ritchie -- Ghostly presences in children's lives : toward a psychoanalysis of the social / Michael O'Loughlin -- Alice down the rabbit hole and through the looking glass : the container and the I of the (be)holder / Karen Lombardi -- New Zealand-based Samoan youth offender subjectivities : working the 'spaces between' / Tamasailau M. Suaalii-Sauni -- Putting myself in the picture : oppositional looks as sites of resistance / Richard Johnson -- Working and reworking children's performance of 'whiteness' in early childhood education / Glenda MacNaughton, Karina Davis & Kylie Smith -- Subjectivity unbound : escaping the 'mortal engines' of the west / Derek Bunyard -- Who let the dogs out? : Unleashing an uncanny sense of audience in the writing workshop / Paula M. Salvio and Gail Boldt -- The curious subject of the child / Michael O'Loughlin -- Afterword / Richard Johnson.
Summary: The purpose of this book is to imagine things otherwise in theorizing childhood sub-jectivity. The work brings together influential thinkers who are forthright in their refusal to be seduced by simplistic binaries, who are willing to address the notion of childhood subjectivity in ways that are complex and critical, and whose arguments lead to practical advances in our thinking about child policy, child-rearing, pedagogy, and curriculum. The contributors, distinguished authors from across the English-speaking world, are concerned about the ways in which teachers' practices are increasingly boundaried and policed, and they grieve for the stifling consequences for future generations of children. Postcolonial and poststructural theories, psychoanalysis, critical theory, personal narrative, and indigenous epistemologies are used creatively to pose the question of childhood subjectivity and to engage the promise of the question-child. This work contributes to a reconsideration of childhood and a rethinking of how we might enhance each child's journey toward becoming.Summary: "Everyone who suspects (and who in their right mind could not?) that the accepted way in which we think about children and prepare adults to work with them is flawed, foolish, and failing, will welcome and relish this book. It weaves together practical engagement, theoretical eclecticism and sophistication, scholarly discretion, criticality bordering on anger, and straightforward human warmth--and the result is brave, powerful, rich and liberating. Its contrarian commitment to human subjectivity and agency, human and disciplinary boundary-crossing, non-binary and universalistic understanding, challenging privilege, promoting equity and social justice, and speaking truth to power, makes it fundamentally important. For practitioners and academics in early childhood studies and cognate fields who want to connect their intellectual, personal, professional, and political lives, this is essential reading."--Heather Piper, Professorial Research Fellow, Institute of Education, Manchester Metropolitan University --Book Jacket.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book North Campus North Campus Main Collection 155.4 IMA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Long Overdue (Lost) A480523B
Book South Campus South Campus Main Collection 155.4 IMA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A503970B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Foreword / Marianne Bloch -- Introduction: occupying the Twilight Zone as a space of possibility / Michael O'Loughlin -- Reading, writing, and the wrath of my father / Jonathan G. Silin -- Mā Wai He Kapu Tī? : Being, knowing, and doing otherwise in early childhood education in Aotearoa / Jenny Ritchie -- Ghostly presences in children's lives : toward a psychoanalysis of the social / Michael O'Loughlin -- Alice down the rabbit hole and through the looking glass : the container and the I of the (be)holder / Karen Lombardi -- New Zealand-based Samoan youth offender subjectivities : working the 'spaces between' / Tamasailau M. Suaalii-Sauni -- Putting myself in the picture : oppositional looks as sites of resistance / Richard Johnson -- Working and reworking children's performance of 'whiteness' in early childhood education / Glenda MacNaughton, Karina Davis & Kylie Smith -- Subjectivity unbound : escaping the 'mortal engines' of the west / Derek Bunyard -- Who let the dogs out? : Unleashing an uncanny sense of audience in the writing workshop / Paula M. Salvio and Gail Boldt -- The curious subject of the child / Michael O'Loughlin -- Afterword / Richard Johnson.

The purpose of this book is to imagine things otherwise in theorizing childhood sub-jectivity. The work brings together influential thinkers who are forthright in their refusal to be seduced by simplistic binaries, who are willing to address the notion of childhood subjectivity in ways that are complex and critical, and whose arguments lead to practical advances in our thinking about child policy, child-rearing, pedagogy, and curriculum. The contributors, distinguished authors from across the English-speaking world, are concerned about the ways in which teachers' practices are increasingly boundaried and policed, and they grieve for the stifling consequences for future generations of children. Postcolonial and poststructural theories, psychoanalysis, critical theory, personal narrative, and indigenous epistemologies are used creatively to pose the question of childhood subjectivity and to engage the promise of the question-child. This work contributes to a reconsideration of childhood and a rethinking of how we might enhance each child's journey toward becoming.

"Everyone who suspects (and who in their right mind could not?) that the accepted way in which we think about children and prepare adults to work with them is flawed, foolish, and failing, will welcome and relish this book. It weaves together practical engagement, theoretical eclecticism and sophistication, scholarly discretion, criticality bordering on anger, and straightforward human warmth--and the result is brave, powerful, rich and liberating. Its contrarian commitment to human subjectivity and agency, human and disciplinary boundary-crossing, non-binary and universalistic understanding, challenging privilege, promoting equity and social justice, and speaking truth to power, makes it fundamentally important. For practitioners and academics in early childhood studies and cognate fields who want to connect their intellectual, personal, professional, and political lives, this is essential reading."--Heather Piper, Professorial Research Fellow, Institute of Education, Manchester Metropolitan University --Book Jacket.

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