
Deleuze and Children
Edinburgh University Press
Published on 22. January 2019
Book
Hardback
232 pages
978-1-4744-2359-5 (ISBN)
Description
This collection applies the characterisations of children and childhood made in Deleuze and Guattari's work to concerns that have shaped our idea of the child. Bringing together established and new voices, the authors cover philosophy, literature, religious studies, education, sociology and film studies. They consider aspects of children's lives such as time, language, gender, affect, religion, atmosphere and schooling. As a whole, this book critically interrogates the pervasive interest in the teleology of upward growth of the child.
Reviews / Votes
This timely new book frees the affective play of childhood from the conceptual persona of the child, reminding readers that the age of childhood never passes. Herein lies a strategy, reiterated on every page, for the invention of new social and political worlds grounded in the praxis of the becoming-child. * Cameron Duff, RMIT University * With pleasing rigour and sly provocation, this essential volume frees the child from Oedipal jail. The child now boldly, and no less beautifully, lucidly sits in radical hands. * Kathryn Bond Stockton, University of Utah *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
3 black and white illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
476 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4744-2359-5 (9781474423595)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Markus Bohlmann is Professor of English at Seneca College, Toronto. He is co-editor of Monstrous Children and Childish Monsters: Essays on Cinema's Holy Terrors (McFarland, 2015) and Misfits: Children with a Twist (Lexington Books, 2017). Anna Hickey-Moody is the inaugural Professor of Intersectional Humanities in the Arts and Humanities Research Institute at Maynooth University. Her work explores intersecting angles of disadvantage through philosophical and creative approaches. She came to Maynooth to develop interdisciplinary research culture exploring intersectionality across the humanities. Prior to joining Maynooth, Anna was Professor of Media and Communication at RMIT University, Melbourne where she held an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship called Interfaith Childhoods. For this large research project, Anna created a unique, responsive research design that allowed her to collaborate with hard-to-reach communities through building strong relationships with children through artmaking. She worked with schools, communities and religious organisations across Australia and the UK to collect and share stories of faith told by diverse religious and secular people. This method offered a way of developing public understandings of what belonging feels like in superdiverse, multicultural cities. You can read what the research participants had to say in the book Faith stories: sustaining meaning and community in troubling times (MUP, 2023). Anna also led the Creative Research in Methods and Practice (CRiMP) Lab and you can read the lab's work in a collection coming out with Edinburgh University Press in 2024. This feminist research laboratory supported a community of queer and gender-diverse researchers working at the intersection of creative practice as a research method, visual sociology and creative anthropology at RMIT. Before joining RMIT University, Anna was Associate Professor of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. She has also held positions at Goldsmiths, London and Monash University, Melbourne. Anna is a very experienced PhD supervisor and is available to supervise projects exploring religion, disability, sexuality, gender, race, youth. She has published widely on gender, sexuality, disability, religion and race and racism as they shape young lives.
Editor
Professor of EnglishSeneca College, Toronto
Professor of Media and CommunicationRMIT University
Content
IntroductionMarkus P. J. Bohlmann and Anna Hickey-Moody
Part I: Deleuze and Children
1. Deleuze, Guattari and Partial ObjectsKenneth Surin
2. Little Hans and the Pedagogies of HeterosexualityAnna Hickey-Moody
3. Undoing the Parent-Function: The Metaphysics and Politics of a Deleuzian ChildOhad Zehavi
4. Beyond Surface Articulation: Alice and the HermunculusHelen Palmer
Part II: Children and Deleuze
5. Pathways through the Labyrinth: Deleuze's Gothic Child in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980)Anna Powell
6. 'Just Tell Them I'm a Chipmunk': Transgender Children and the Breach in the Oedipal Gender AssemblageMat Fournier
7. Affective Atmospheres: Joy, Ethics and the Howl of Children and Young People's (A)SexualityIan Thomas
8. Affect, Play and Becoming-MusickingChris Stover
9. Temporalities of Children's Literature: Chronos, Aion and Incorporeal AgeingJane Newland
10. Children, Deleuze and WorldingMarkus P.J. Bohlmann
11. Child, Baby, Embryo, Brain, MonsterJon Roffe
Biographies
Index
Part I: Deleuze and Children
1. Deleuze, Guattari and Partial ObjectsKenneth Surin
2. Little Hans and the Pedagogies of HeterosexualityAnna Hickey-Moody
3. Undoing the Parent-Function: The Metaphysics and Politics of a Deleuzian ChildOhad Zehavi
4. Beyond Surface Articulation: Alice and the HermunculusHelen Palmer
Part II: Children and Deleuze
5. Pathways through the Labyrinth: Deleuze's Gothic Child in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980)Anna Powell
6. 'Just Tell Them I'm a Chipmunk': Transgender Children and the Breach in the Oedipal Gender AssemblageMat Fournier
7. Affective Atmospheres: Joy, Ethics and the Howl of Children and Young People's (A)SexualityIan Thomas
8. Affect, Play and Becoming-MusickingChris Stover
9. Temporalities of Children's Literature: Chronos, Aion and Incorporeal AgeingJane Newland
10. Children, Deleuze and WorldingMarkus P.J. Bohlmann
11. Child, Baby, Embryo, Brain, MonsterJon Roffe
Biographies
Index