Decolonizing Childhoods. Liebel, Manfred

Decolonizing Childhoods - Liebel, Manfred


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we speak of subjectivities instead of subjects, an understanding of humanity is addressed which does not separate rationality from the body, but links rationality with physical and psychical proportions (see Dreyfus and Taylor, 2015). In South America, for example, this understanding of subjectivity is expressed in the revival of the indigenous cosmovisions of Sumak Kawsay/Buen Vivir (good living; see Acosta, 2013) and has also led to debates on a new understanding of ‘political subjectivity’ (Díaz Gómez, 2005; Alvarado et al, 2008; González Rey, 2012) or ‘postcolonial subjectivity’ (Rivas, 2010).

      When I speak of children as social, political, or postcolonial subjects or actors in the subsequent chapters of the book, I try to take a broad view of their subjectivity. Accordingly, I do not understand their actions as the expression of a consciousness which is fed solely from rationality or even imagined as superior, but consider it an integral part and in the context of the diversity of human and non-human life and its existential foundations.

      Notes