In this paper I seek to explore the idea of the otherness of childhood. I suggest that there are considerable differences between the becomings of children and the becomings of adults. In the face of these a number of questions need to be asked about adult-childhood relations in society and about academic approaches to children and childhood, particularly in terms of representing childhood and the implications of such representing. The paper sets out the idea of otherness, locates this within current debate about the crisis of childhood, and then argues that non-representational approaches might be particularly relevant to progressing children's geographies. These approaches stress modesty, practice, experimentation, messiness, creativity a...
While many perspectives continue to work with universal concepts drawn from the metropolitan centers...
What is childhood? In recent years, a cluster of critical and complex ideas have emerged around the ...
In this paper I argue that a significant proportion of research on children’s emotional geographies ...
In this paper I seek to explore the idea of the otherness of childhood. I suggest that there are con...
In this paper I seek to explore the idea of the otherness of childhood. I suggest that there are con...
The social sciences traditionally have tended to be adult-centric, with perspectives from and about ...
The intention of this article is to expand some of the contexts and some of the conceptual and metho...
This paper offers further explorations of the idea that children are other to adults in quite profou...
In this article, I consider “alter-childhoods”: explicit attempts to imagine, construct, talk about,...
This chapter offers a critical engagement with a so-called ‘new wave’ of childhood studies. It begin...
The intention of this article is to expand some of the contexts and some of the conceptual and metho...
This paper explores adult discourses in literary references which revolve around the relationship be...
This keynote explores the changing nature of children's geographies as an academic project. It proce...
There is still only a limited development of a solidly grounded social and cultural geography prepar...
The aim of this paper is to explore the idea that in the UK ‘the urban’ can be constructed as an in...
While many perspectives continue to work with universal concepts drawn from the metropolitan centers...
What is childhood? In recent years, a cluster of critical and complex ideas have emerged around the ...
In this paper I argue that a significant proportion of research on children’s emotional geographies ...
In this paper I seek to explore the idea of the otherness of childhood. I suggest that there are con...
In this paper I seek to explore the idea of the otherness of childhood. I suggest that there are con...
The social sciences traditionally have tended to be adult-centric, with perspectives from and about ...
The intention of this article is to expand some of the contexts and some of the conceptual and metho...
This paper offers further explorations of the idea that children are other to adults in quite profou...
In this article, I consider “alter-childhoods”: explicit attempts to imagine, construct, talk about,...
This chapter offers a critical engagement with a so-called ‘new wave’ of childhood studies. It begin...
The intention of this article is to expand some of the contexts and some of the conceptual and metho...
This paper explores adult discourses in literary references which revolve around the relationship be...
This keynote explores the changing nature of children's geographies as an academic project. It proce...
There is still only a limited development of a solidly grounded social and cultural geography prepar...
The aim of this paper is to explore the idea that in the UK ‘the urban’ can be constructed as an in...
While many perspectives continue to work with universal concepts drawn from the metropolitan centers...
What is childhood? In recent years, a cluster of critical and complex ideas have emerged around the ...
In this paper I argue that a significant proportion of research on children’s emotional geographies ...