By exploring and reconsidering the view of children’s encounters with nature from a posthumanist perspective, this chapter seeks to dismantle rather than support constructions of a nature-culture binary. A posthumanist approach adopts the tools of new materialism by allowing for the rereading of research data by decentering the human and attending to the complexity of child-nature relations. This work is done in order to unpack the means through which romanticized notions of children’s “nature” experiences can be embedded in dominated Western-centric literature in the child-nature movement, a movement that is having significant currency in environmental and sustainability education literature as well. To illustrate the importance of...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...
In this dissertation, I map the journey I went on; from applying cultural-historical theory to the a...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...
This article explores and reconsiders the view of children’s encounters with place as central to a p...
The power of the human/nature divide is that it positions humans as ‘exceptional’ and outside of nat...
This paper theorizes children's interspecies relation with dogs in La Paz Bolivia utilizing post-hum...
This childhood/nature chapter was provoked by curiosity about the rise of posthuman theorizing in ea...
This chapter examines some of the challenges of unlearning anthropocentrism - i.e. the deep-seated c...
This chapter takes the age of Anthropocene as the time of human entanglement in the fate of the plan...
This book elaborates the need, in a rapidly urbanizing world, for recognition of the ecological comm...
In addressing the need for a more robust engagement with aesthetics in posthumanist studies of child...
Abstract: In what ways does nature serve children as a matrix of becoming human? Are children impove...
This chapter proposes that there is a need to examine childhoodnature experiences and the way in whi...
Serpell (2009) identifies that until recent times connections with humans and non-human animals have...
In response to the interconnected ecological and climate emergencies there are increasingly strident...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...
In this dissertation, I map the journey I went on; from applying cultural-historical theory to the a...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...
This article explores and reconsiders the view of children’s encounters with place as central to a p...
The power of the human/nature divide is that it positions humans as ‘exceptional’ and outside of nat...
This paper theorizes children's interspecies relation with dogs in La Paz Bolivia utilizing post-hum...
This childhood/nature chapter was provoked by curiosity about the rise of posthuman theorizing in ea...
This chapter examines some of the challenges of unlearning anthropocentrism - i.e. the deep-seated c...
This chapter takes the age of Anthropocene as the time of human entanglement in the fate of the plan...
This book elaborates the need, in a rapidly urbanizing world, for recognition of the ecological comm...
In addressing the need for a more robust engagement with aesthetics in posthumanist studies of child...
Abstract: In what ways does nature serve children as a matrix of becoming human? Are children impove...
This chapter proposes that there is a need to examine childhoodnature experiences and the way in whi...
Serpell (2009) identifies that until recent times connections with humans and non-human animals have...
In response to the interconnected ecological and climate emergencies there are increasingly strident...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...
In this dissertation, I map the journey I went on; from applying cultural-historical theory to the a...
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, t...