Description
The figure we now recognize as a child was created in tandem with forms of modernity that the Enlightenment generated and that the humanities are now working to rethink. Thus the growth of childhood studies allows for new approaches to some of the most important and provocative issues in humanities scholarship: the viability of the social contract, the definition of agency, the performance of identity, and the construction of gender, sexuality, and race. Because defining childhood is a means of defining and distributing power and obligation, studying childhood requires a radically altered approach to what constitutes knowledge about the human subject.
The diverse essays in The Children's Table share a unifying premise: to include the child in any field of study realigns the shape of that field, changing the terms of inquiry and forcing a different set of questions. Taken as a whole, the essays argue that, at this key moment in the state of the humanities, rethinking the child is both necessary and revolutionary.
Contributors: Annette Ruth Appell, Sophie Bell, Robin Bernstein, Sarah Chinn, Lesley Ginsberg, Lucia Hodgson, Susan Honeyman, Roy Kozlovsky, James Marten, Karen Sanchez-Eppler, Carol Singley, Lynne Vallone, John Wall.
About the Author
Anna Mae Duane is an associate professor of English and director of the American Studies Program at the University of Connecticut, USA. She is the author of Suffering Childhood in Early America: Violence, Race, and the Making of the Child Victim (Georgia).
Book Information
ISBN 9780820345222
Author Anna Mae Duane
Format Paperback
Page Count 280
Imprint University of Georgia Press
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Weight(grams) 380g