This book is a genealogical foregrounding and performance of conceptions
of children and their childhoods over time. We acknowledge that
children's lives are embedded in worlds both inside and outside of
structured schooling or institutional settings, and that this
relationality informs how we think about what it means to be a child
living and experiencing childhood. The book maps the field by taking up
a cross-disciplinary, genealogical niche to offer both an introduction
to theoretical underpinnings of emerging theories and concepts, and to
provide hands-on examples of how they might play out. This book
positions children and their everyday lived childhoods in the
Anthropocene and focuses on the interface of children's being in the
everyday spaces and places of contemporary communities and societies. In
particular this book examines how the shift towards posthuman and new
materialist perspectives continues to challenge dominant developmental,
social constructivist and structuralist theoretical approaches in
diverse ways, to help us to understand contemporary constructions of
childhoods. It recognises that while such dominant approaches have long
been shown to limit the complexity of what it means to be a child living
in the contemporary world, the traditions of many Eurocentric theories
have not addressed the diversity of children's lives in the majority of
countries or in the Global South.