Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials

In this article, I explore the lessons that the anthropological debates of the 1980s about writing culture might have for contemporary childhood research within anthropology and the social sciences more generally. I argue that the current rhetoric about “giving voice to children,” commonplace both i...

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Main Authors: Allison James, Tradução Deborah Esther Grajzer
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2019-11-01
Series:Zero-a-seis
Subjects:
voz
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/zeroseis/article/view/68374
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spelling doaj-80041d7f861843339a42c69143c6ffae2020-11-24T22:04:59ZporUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaZero-a-seis1980-45122019-11-01214021924810.5007/1980-4512.2019v21n40p21932603Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentialsAllison James0Tradução Deborah Esther Grajzer1Departamento de Sociologia Universidade de Sheffield Sheffield, S10 2TU, Reino UnidoUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaIn this article, I explore the lessons that the anthropological debates of the 1980s about writing culture might have for contemporary childhood research within anthropology and the social sciences more generally. I argue that the current rhetoric about “giving voice to children,” commonplace both inside and outside the academy, poses a threat to the future of childhood research because it masks a number of important conceptual and epistemological problems. In particular, these relate to questions of representation, issues of authenticity, the diversity of children’s experiences, and children’s participation in research, all of which need to be addressed by anthropologists in their own research practices with children. Unless anthropologists do so, childhood research risks becoming marginalized once more and will fail to provide an arena within which children are seen as social actors who can provide a unique perspective on the social world about matters that concern them as children.https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/zeroseis/article/view/68374criançasinfânciarepresentaçãovoz
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allison James
Tradução Deborah Esther Grajzer
spellingShingle Allison James
Tradução Deborah Esther Grajzer
Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
Zero-a-seis
crianças
infância
representação
voz
author_facet Allison James
Tradução Deborah Esther Grajzer
author_sort Allison James
title Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
title_short Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
title_full Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
title_fullStr Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
title_full_unstemmed Giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
title_sort giving voice to children’s voices: practices and problems, pitfalls and potentials
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
series Zero-a-seis
issn 1980-4512
publishDate 2019-11-01
description In this article, I explore the lessons that the anthropological debates of the 1980s about writing culture might have for contemporary childhood research within anthropology and the social sciences more generally. I argue that the current rhetoric about “giving voice to children,” commonplace both inside and outside the academy, poses a threat to the future of childhood research because it masks a number of important conceptual and epistemological problems. In particular, these relate to questions of representation, issues of authenticity, the diversity of children’s experiences, and children’s participation in research, all of which need to be addressed by anthropologists in their own research practices with children. Unless anthropologists do so, childhood research risks becoming marginalized once more and will fail to provide an arena within which children are seen as social actors who can provide a unique perspective on the social world about matters that concern them as children.
topic crianças
infância
representação
voz
url https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/zeroseis/article/view/68374
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