Children’s Images of Identity: Drawing the Self and the OtherJill Brown, Nicola F. Johnson Springer, 2015/06/25 - 182 ページ "The understandings which children have of Indigenous identity provide means by which to explore the ways in which Indigenous identity is both projected and constructed in society. These understandings play a powerful part in the ways in which Indigenous peoples are positioned in the mainstream society with which they are connected. The research presented in this edited collection uses children’s drawings to illuminate and explore the images children, both mainstream and Indigenous, have of Indigenous peoples. The data generated by this process allows exploration of the ways in which Indigenous identity is understood globally, through a series of locally focussed studies connected by theme and approach. The data serves to illuminate both the space made available by mainstream groups, and aspects of modernity accommodated within the Indigenous sense of self. Our aim within this project has been to analyse and discuss the ways in which children construct identity, both their own and thatof others. Children were asked to share their thoughts through drawings which were then used as the basis for conversation with the researchers. In this way the interaction between mainstream modernity and traditional Indigenous identity is made available for discussion and the connection between children’s lived experiences of identity and the wider global discussion is both immediately enacted and located within broader international understandings of Indigenous cultures and their place in the world." |
目次
| 1 | |
Drawings Used as Research Method | 15 |
Yolnugu Children and Mainstream Australia | 26 |
Constructing Self and Other through Images | 41 |
Paintings or Photographs? | 57 |
A Matter of Relations | 74 |
Images of New Zealand Māori Identity | 89 |
The Experience of Migrant Children in China | 102 |
Working with Parents and Little Time to Play | 117 |
HOMOGENOUS JAPANS INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ... | 131 |
Hmong and Yao Primary Students in Northern Thailand | 168 |
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS | 181 |
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2015 Sense Publishers Aboriginal Australians activities Ainu culture Alerby Alerby & Bergmark Alerby and Bergmark analysis areas asked Baduy children Bangladesh Beijing Bengali Bengali girl Brown & N. F. Chakma Chakma girl chapter children’s drawings Children’s Images China Chinese Chittagong hill tracts classroom colour constructed context cultural identity curriculum data collection Dene depicted described discussions Dogrib drew example express Figure fishing groups Hmong Hokkaido Images of Identity imagined important Indigenous interaction Inuvialuit Japan Japanese kapa haka Kaupapa Māori Kiruna Komi language Komi Republic learning lived experiences Luleå mainstream children mainstream Indonesian children Māori language marae means migrant children schools modern N. F. Johnson Eds outer Baduy parents participants people’s perspectives picture population powhiri public schools reindeer relationships represent Retrieved Russian Sámi Sami Parliament shows Siddle social society te reo Māori teacher themes understanding urban children visual art wearing Zealand
