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The politics of young children through the 'epistemologies of the south'

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    Abstract

    Drawing data from an ethnographic study conducted in an early-years setting in Chennai, India, where everyday politics is couched in material and relational practices, the paper ruminates on the idea of 'children as subjects' in relation to politics and public life. By using the framework of 'epistemologies of the south', the analysis illustrates how a focus on 'global cognitive justice' might enable us to understand the politics of life in the global south differently from Western critical theory. The paper further deliberates on how such a 'decolonial imagination' would help us to reframe Eurocentric liberalist thinking and its conceptualisations of childhood and the political, practiced in a zone of messy social reality. In so doing, the paper tries to unpack 'the political' through paying particular attention to different ways of being, knowing, and doing children's politics, and the subaltern practices of generational relations in subject making.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number151
    JournalSocial Sciences
    Volume8
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 1 2019

    Keywords

    • Childhood
    • Epistemology
    • India
    • Politics
    • Subjectivity

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • General Social Sciences

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