Querying Childhood: Feminist Reframings: Politics and Society in India and the Global South
Editat de Mary E. John, Barbara Lotz, Elisabeth Schömbucheren Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 sep 2024
Drawing on recent literature on childhood, the chapters in this volume cover a range of fresh perspectives. These include:
- What kinds of biological, legal, chronological histories age has and the fundamental ways in which these links are being recast
- How gender differences occupy a prominent place in historical constructions of identities, especially the frequent infantilisation of women, who are never seen as adults in the full sense of the term nor equally allowed to be children beyond the first years of life
- Ways in which class, caste, gender, and ethnicity shaped classrooms and opportunities for education in the colonial period and the 20th century to produce new ideas of childhood
- Gendered outcomes for children in the context of a long entanglement of law with labour, transformations in practices of parenting over time, and how the concept of care emerged in both Western and non-Western societies
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032783499
ISBN-10: 1032783494
Pagini: 340
Ilustrații: 30
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge India
Seria Politics and Society in India and the Global South
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032783494
Pagini: 340
Ilustrații: 30
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge India
Seria Politics and Society in India and the Global South
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
PostgraduateCuprins
Introduction I: Histories of Childhood 1. Chronological Age and the Uneven Development of Modern Childhood in the United States 2. ‘Is She a Child?’ Emergence of Chronological Age in Early Colonial Bengal 3. Age and Marriage: Problems of Girlhood in Colonial and Post-colonial Bengal 4. Reflections on the History of Childhood and the State in Kerala 5. The Travels and Appeal of the ‘Girl Child’ II: Education and Labour 6. Gender, Education, and Child Labour: Reflections on Ontological Issues 7. The Classroom as Sensorium in Mysore, 1840-1930 8. Juvenile Labour in the Beedi Industry of Central India, 1960s-80s 9. ‘Learning to Service’: Vocational Training for Marginalised Youth, Aspirations, Consumption, and Social Reproduction III: Practices of Parenting 10. Disciplining Girls in German Families: Gendered Childhood Experiences of Violent and Authoritarian Parenting in Germany from the 1890s to the 1940s 11. Narrating Childhood: Difficult Memories in Trans Autobiography 12. ‘I Lost My Son Whom I Raised for Twelve Years.’ Anxieties Among Parents of Trans Children 13. Contested Equality: Co-Parenting, Child Welfare, and Gender Politics in Contemporary History
Recenzii
“With her characteristic brilliance and perspicacity, Mary E. John makes a signal contribution to feminist scholarship in this book. Her genealogy of child marriage draws upon historical, comparative, and intersecting analytical frameworks. This deep and nuanced contextualization compels us to consider afresh what we had long assumed we knew about a familiar subject. Her argument about "compulsory marriage," which she introduces to reframe the discussion of child marriage, offers an important conceptual advance that will likely become a valuable new resource in the feminist toolkit. This is one of the most original and exciting feminist interventions to come along in a while.” — Mrinalini Sinha, Alice Freeman Palmer Professor of History, University of Michigan, USA
“This elegantly incisive book by Mary E. John, one of India’s leading feminist scholars, challenges us to interrogate some of the myths of reason and progress that we complacently live by. Her object of study is public discourse and social policy on the issue of child marriage, a ‘social problem’ which, for close on two centuries, has been an object of attention by Indian social reformers, women’s movement activists, and latterly, in a global context, by international development agencies. In a tour de force, John decodes the intricacies of various data sets and the assumptions that drive them, to suggest that it is not child-marriage that is the problem for Indian women, but rather the ‘compulsory’ nature of marriage itself which must be the frame of reference for genuine change.” — Patricia Uberoi, Retired Professor, Institute of Economic Growth & Chairperson, Institute of Chinese Studies, New Delhi, India
“This elegantly incisive book by Mary E. John, one of India’s leading feminist scholars, challenges us to interrogate some of the myths of reason and progress that we complacently live by. Her object of study is public discourse and social policy on the issue of child marriage, a ‘social problem’ which, for close on two centuries, has been an object of attention by Indian social reformers, women’s movement activists, and latterly, in a global context, by international development agencies. In a tour de force, John decodes the intricacies of various data sets and the assumptions that drive them, to suggest that it is not child-marriage that is the problem for Indian women, but rather the ‘compulsory’ nature of marriage itself which must be the frame of reference for genuine change.” — Patricia Uberoi, Retired Professor, Institute of Economic Growth & Chairperson, Institute of Chinese Studies, New Delhi, India
Notă biografică
Mary E. John was formerly Professor and Director of the Centre for Women’s Development Studies, New Delhi. She was Associate Professor and Deputy Director of the Women’s Studies Programme at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, from 2001 to 2006.
Barbara Lotz studied Indology in Heidelberg and New Delhi, focusing on modern Hindi literature, literary history, and translation studies. She has been coordinating Indo-German academic partnerships under the DAAD format: A New Passage to India since 2010 and is part of the M.S. Merian – R. Tagore ICAS:MP as a module member of TM 5, The Challenge of Gender (University of Wuerzburg).
Elisabeth Schömbucher is a former Professor of Anthropology. She has been teaching at the South Asia Institute, Heidelberg, and joined the Department of Indology at Würzburg University in 2006. Besides teaching Anthropology of South Asia, she has conceptualised the teaching programme Global Systems and Intercultural Competence (GSiK).
Barbara Lotz studied Indology in Heidelberg and New Delhi, focusing on modern Hindi literature, literary history, and translation studies. She has been coordinating Indo-German academic partnerships under the DAAD format: A New Passage to India since 2010 and is part of the M.S. Merian – R. Tagore ICAS:MP as a module member of TM 5, The Challenge of Gender (University of Wuerzburg).
Elisabeth Schömbucher is a former Professor of Anthropology. She has been teaching at the South Asia Institute, Heidelberg, and joined the Department of Indology at Würzburg University in 2006. Besides teaching Anthropology of South Asia, she has conceptualised the teaching programme Global Systems and Intercultural Competence (GSiK).
Descriere
This book explores the complex history of child marriage as a social and feminist issue in India across different domains. It critically reviews a wide range of historical, demographic, and legal scholarship on the subject, questions existing approaches, analyses the latest data sources, and develops a new concept of compulsory marriage.