This book explores how stretching stories through posthuman and
autoethnographic perspectives can produce new stories that
decolon(ial)ize traditional thinking and approaches to Early Childhood
Education (ECE). It demonstrates how stories can provide a different way
of knowing, and a way of knowing differently: a way of decolon(ial)izing
current discourses of early childhood education within educational
institutions.
The book uses research and practice in ECE to act as a canvas, a context
with which to explore how autoethnography can become other when viewed
through a posthumanist lens. As a consequence the chapters and stories
within allow for an interplay between the posthumanist and the
autoethnographic, an interplay that allows for a very specific type of
meaning to emerge; a meaning that traffics in numerous and disruptive
possibilities rather than settled certainties. In so doing, authors
rethink and perturb the notion of child-centered approaches to knowing,
be(com)ing, and doing within the Early Childhood Education context.