Critical Childhood Studies and the Practice of Interdisciplinarity: Disciplining the Child

Critical Childhood Studies and the Practice of Interdisciplinarity: Disciplining the Child

Critical Childhood Studies and the Practice of Interdisciplinarity: Disciplining the Child

Critical Childhood Studies and the Practice of Interdisciplinarity: Disciplining the Child

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Overview

This book analyzes different figurations of childhood in contemporary culture and politics with a particular focus on interdisciplinary methodologies of critical childhood studies. It argues that while the figure of the child has been traditionally located at the peripheries of academic disciplines, perhaps most notably in history, sociology and literature, the proposed critical discussions of the ideological, symbolic and affective roles that children play in contemporary societies suggest that they are often the locus of larger societal crises, collective psychic tensions, and unspoken prohibitions and taboos. As such, this book brings into focus the prejudices against childhood embedded in our standard approaches to organizing knowledge, and asks: is there a natural disciplinary home for the study of childhood? Or is this field fundamentally interdisciplinary, peripheral or problematic to notions of disciplinary identity? In this respect, does childhood force innovation in thinking about disciplinarity? For instance, how does the analysis of childhood affect how we think about methodology? What role do understandings of childhood play in delimiting how we conceive of our society, our future, and ourselves? How does thinking about childhood affect how we think about culture, history, and politics?

This book brings together researchers working broadly in critical child studies, but from various disciplines in the humanities and social sciences (including philosophy, literary studies, sociology, cultural studies and history), in order to stage a conversation between these diverse perspectives on the disciplinary or (interdisciplinary) character of ‘the child’ as an object of research. Such conversation builds on the assumption that childhood, far from being marginal, is a topic that is hidden in plain sight. That is to say, while the child is always a presence in culture, history, literature and philosophy—and is often even a highly charged figure within those fields—its operation and effects are rarely theoretically scrutinized, but rather are more likely drawn upon, surreptitiously, for another purpose.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498525770
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 08/06/2019
Series: Children and Youth in Popular Culture
Pages: 190
Product dimensions: 6.03(w) x 8.61(h) x 0.55(d)

About the Author

Joanne Faulkner lectures in philosophy and women’s and gender studies at the University of New South Wales.
Magdalena Zolkos is senior research fellow at the Institute for Social Justice, Australian Catholic University.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Joanne Faulkner and Magdalena Zolkos Part One: The Child in Memory Chapter One: Locating the Child within the History of Childhood, Shurlee Swain Chapter Two: Theorizing Childhood in Second-Wave Feminism: A Re-Reading of Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch (1970), Isobelle Barrett Meyering Chapter Three: “Ancestral Guilt”: Childhood as Redemption and the Question of Nazi Descendancy in German Cultural Memory, Magdalena Zolkos Part Two: The Child in Imagination Chapter Four: The Nature of the Child and the Child of Nature: Historical and Contemporary Continuities, Gail Hawkes and Danielle Egan Chapter Five: Humanity’s Little Scrap Dealers: The Child at Play in Modern Philosophy and Implications for Sexualization Discourse, Joanne Faulkner Chapter Six: Childhood, Character, and the Nineteenth-Century Novel, Elizabeth Drumm Part Three: The Institutionalized Child Chapter Seven: Investment, Risk, and Other Ways of Thinking About Children, kylie valentine Chapter Eight: Discursive Children: Stolen or Just Forgotten? Racial Politics and the Figure of “the Child” in an Australian Culture of Liberalism, Emily Soper About the Contributors
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