E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
Burke / Duncan Bodies as Sites of Cultural Reflection in Early Childhood Education
Erscheinungsjahr 2014
ISBN: 978-1-317-63700-4
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
E-Book, Englisch, 200 Seiten
Reihe: Changing Images of Early Childhood
ISBN: 978-1-317-63700-4
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Taking the body as a locus for discussion, Rachael S. Burke and Judith Duncan argue not only that implicit cultural practices shape most of the interactions taking place in early childhood curricula and pedagogy but that many of these practices often go unnoticed or unrecognized as being pedagogy. Current scholars, inspired by Foucault, acknowledge that the body is socially and culturally produced and historically situated—it is simultaneously a part of nature and society as well as a representation of the way that nature and society can be conceived. Every natural symbol originating from the body contains and conveys a social meaning, and every culture selects its own meaning from the myriad of potential body symbolisms.
Bodies as Sites of Cultural Reflection in Early Childhood Education uses empirical examples from qualitative fieldwork conducted in New Zealand and Japan to explore these theories and discuss the ways in which children’s bodies represent a central focus in teachers’ pedagogical discussions and create contexts for the embodiment of children’s experiences in the early years.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
LIST OF FIGURES
FOREWORD
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
NOTE ON AUTHORS
GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS
SERIES EDITOR INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1: Introduction
Introduction
Personal Connections
Theoretical Underpinnings
Marcel Mauss and the emergence of the body in anthropological theory.
The work of Mary Douglas.
Michel Foucault and the body.
The three bodies.
Methodology Behind the Scenes
The Field
Field site structure and daily routines.
Fieldwork methods.
The Development of Early Childhood Services in New Zealand and Japan
New Zealand.
Japan.
Bodily Practices.
Outline of the Book
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 2: Children’s Bodies as Contested Sites
Introduction
The Un(clothed) Body
The naked child in Japanese educational settings.
The Japanese Child’s Body as a Symbol of Nostalgia
Skinship as cultural ideology.
The collective unclothed body.
The Protected Body in New Zealand Early Childhood Education
Bodies under surveillance.
Normalising the clothed body.
Keeping the Japanese Child’s Body Safe
Framing the Child’s Body
Notions of privacy.
The Body as a Site of Excretion
The body as teacher in Japanese early childhood education.
Reflecting on Children’s Bodies as Culturally Contested
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 3: Embodying the Curriculum
Introduction
Engaging the Body in Sensory Play
Wrapping and unwrapping the body.
Messy play.
The Body as a Counterpoint to Modern Lifestyles
Body Techniques
The cultural meanings of touch.
The body as a medium of communication.
The Physical Self
Embodying gambaru in the Japanese context.
Reflections on Embodying the Curriculum
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 4: Risk and the Body
Introduction
Towards a Discourse of Risk
The Position of Children in the Risk Society
Perilous Play: The Kindergarten Playground as Culturally Contested Space
A Pedagogy of Risk
Creating Real and Imagined Boundaries to Minimise Risk
Cultural Definitions of Safe Supervision
The low profile of Japanese teachers.
The use of real tools.
Tools as iconic symbols.
Assessing the risks and rewards of real tools.
Defining objects in play as safe or risky.
Perceptions of Risk and the Body
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 5: The Body as a Site of Discipline
Introduction
Deconstructing Noise
Noise as counterproductive.
Noise as organic.
Conflict and Confrontation
Rights discourses in New Zealand.
The lessons of conflict.
Learning communicative competency.
Developing empathy.
The Use of Time and Space
Time and space as disciplinary techniques in the Japanese kindergarten.
Children’s Bodies as Objects of the Medical Gaze
Reflecting on the Body as a Site of Discipline
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 6: The Body as Natural Symbol
Introduction
Dirt and the Body
The Physical Body as a Microcosm of Society
The Symbolism of Protective Barriers
Bodily Fluids as Metaphors of Disorder
Purification of the Body
Polluted spaces.
Food In and Out of Place
Rituals around food.
The lunchbox as a reflection of cultural ideology.
Reflecting on Constructions of Dirt, Pollution and Purity
Chapter References
Chapter Endnotes
CHAPTER 7: Bodies in Context
Introduction
Bodies from the Beginning
Constructing the body.
The body and its products.
Internalising techniques of the body.
Order and the body.
Approaches to Dirt and Pollution
Coming Full Circle
Chapter References
INDEX