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Children Framing Childhoods: Working-Class Kids’ Visions of Care

Autor Wendy Luttrell
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 feb 2020
Urban educational research, practice, and policy is preoccupied with problems, brokenness, stigma, and blame. As a result, too many people are unable to recognize the capacities and desires of children and youth growing up in working-class communities. This book offers an alternative angle of vision—animated by young people’s own photographs, videos, and perspectives over time. It shows how a racially, ethnically, and linguistically diverse community of young people in Worcester, MA used cameras at different ages (10, 12, 16 and 18) to capture and value the centrality of care in their lives, homes, and classrooms. Luttrell’s immersive, creative, and layered analysis of the young people’s images and narratives boldly refutes biased assumptions about working-class childhoods and re-envisions schools as inclusive, imaginative, and careful spaces. With an accompanying website featuring additional digital resources (childrenframingchildhoods.com), this book challenges us to see differently and, thus, set our sights on a better future.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781447352853
ISBN-10: 1447352858
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 87 color plates
Dimensiuni: 159 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Bristol University Press
Colecția Policy Press

Notă biografică

Wendy Luttrell is professor of urban education, sociology' and critical social psychology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. 

Cuprins

Prelude: Worcester, Massachusetts. Fall, 2003
Digital Interlude #1: Dwelling in School
 1 Ways of seeing diverse working-class children and childhoods
2 The everyday politics of belonging/s
3 Motherhood, childhood, and love labor in family
choreographies of care
Digital Interlude #2: Feeding the Family
 4 School choreographies of care: being seen, being safe,
and being believed
Digital Interlude #3: Nice…?
 5 That’s (not) me now: development, identity, and being in time
Digital Interlude #4: Being in Time
 6 The freedom to care
Postlude: Notes on reflexive methods: past, present, and future
Digital Interlude #5: Collaborative Seeing
 Appendix
Notes