印度的童年与青年:295 页,159.99 美元(精装本)。ISBN: 978-3-031-31 819-1

IF 1.4 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL WORK
Namrita Batra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

该书是对不断增加的探讨现代性如何塑造印度儿童和青少年生活的文献的有益补充。编者汇集了 11 项引人入胜的定性研究,他们一致认为,印度城市年轻人对现代性的表现是多变的,他们参与某些现代实践,同时也抵制其他现代实践。在这一贯穿各章节的金色主线下,本书分为两个部分。第一部分侧重于将儿童定位为 "善良"、"理性 "和 "自主 "的公民的现代论述,他们努力成为具有社会建设性和经济生产力的社会成员,而国家则是一个仁慈的行为者,通过保护性立法来保障儿童的权利,并赋予儿童权利,使他们能够对侵犯儿童权利的行为进行抗争。在本节中,作者通过讨论生活技能教育计划的构思、幼儿课程、印刷和视听媒体以及殖民时期感化院和孟买纺织厂的做法,对这些论述进行了阐释。第二部分的重点更加多样化,展示了儿童是如何与这些话语进行谈判的。在这一部分中,作者研究了参加课后活动的残疾儿童、参加个性发展课程的青少年、生活在贫民窟的年轻女性、从事拾破烂工作的移民青年以及精英学校的儿童(他们通常渴望接受国际教育)的心声。除了展示儿童在多种背景下对现代性的不同诠释,本书的编者还希望关注为全球南部和来自全球南部的知识建设。为此,他们提出了 "日常城市 "的概念,以描述年轻人在城市环境中对现代性的多变诠释,以及构建这一现实的日常互动。在此过程中,他们借鉴了印度学者的研究成果,将城市确定为现代性项目有望在全球南部地区展开的生态单元,并对社会本体进行概念化。诚然,年轻人与现代性的谈判在城市地区非常明显,因为那里有更多的现代机构、国家和私人机构,以及来自国内和国际不同社区的人们。然而,在强调城市性的同时,这一概念无意中将乡村空间本质化为传统空间。玛丽-安-查科(Mary Ann Chacko)(在本卷中)认为,随着印刷和数字媒体的使用,农村和城市家庭中的年轻人都在讨论现代话语。此外,农村地区的教育和医疗服务主要由现代国家提供,在农村和城市之间迁移的年轻人不可能不受现代思维的影响。因此,"日常都市 "的使用确实有可能将农村地区的年轻人定位为正统派,而不是城市里的年轻人。在对 "日常都市 "进行概念化时,编者还借鉴了印度人对社会现实的理解,并认为这种理解对全球南部的研究具有借鉴意义。然而,他们并没有讨论其解释的情景性如何丰富读者对世界这一地区互动的理解。可以说,讨论印度人对社会本体论的观点如何增强我们对全球南部社会互动的分析,将有益于倡导南方的知识建设。该书以现代性为重点,对社会学、人类学、性别研究、国际发展和教育等不同学科和跨学科研究领域都具有现实意义。本书为希望开展定性研究的学生提供了一些重要的研究方法,即人种学、话语分析、访谈研究以及文献和视频数据的档案分析。本书还让非政府组织、国际发展组织的工作人员以及领导国家儿童和青少年计划的官员了解儿童与现代性的日常斗争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Childhood and youth in India: Engagements with modernity By Anandini Dar, Divya Kannan (Eds.), Cham, Switzerland AG: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. pp. 295, $159.99 (hardback). ISBN: 978-3-031-31 819-1

The book is a useful addition to the steadily increasing body of literature that explores how modernity shapes the lives of children and young people in India. The editors bring together 11, engaging qualitative research studies, united in their argument that young people's enactments of modernity in urban India are fluid, with them partaking in certain modern practices and resisting others. With this golden thread running across the chapters, the book is divided into two sections. The first section focuses on modern discourses that position children as ‘good’, ‘rational’ and ‘autonomous’ citizens who strive to be socially constructive and economically productive members of society, and the state as a benevolent actor, safeguarding children's rights with protective legislation and empowering them to advocate for their infringement. The authors, in this section, shine a light on these discourses by discussing the ideas framing life skill education programmes, early childhood curriculum, print and audio-visual media and the practices of reformatory schools and Bombay textile mills during colonial times. The second section diversifies its focus to show how children are negotiating these discourses. In this section, the authors examine the voices of disabled children in after-school programmes, youth enrolled in personality development courses, young women living in slum habitations, migrant youth working as rag-pickers and children in elite schools, often aspiring for an international education.

Besides showcasing children's varied interpretations of modernity across multiple contexts, the editors of the book also wish to accord attention to knowledge building for and from the Global South. In this vein, they put forward the concept of everyday urban to describe both, young people's fluid interpretations of modernity in urban contexts and the everyday interactions through which this reality is constructed. Doing so, they draw on the work of Indian scholars to identify the urban as the ecological unit within which projects of modernity are expected to unfold in the Global South and for conceptualising the ontology of the social.

The concept, everyday urban, emphasises that urbanity is crucial to the performance of modernity in India and the Global South. It is true that young people's negotiations with modernity are conspicuous in urban areas which are home to many more modern institutions, state and private and people from varied communities, national and international. However, in underscoring urbanity, the concept inadvertently essentialises rural spaces as traditional. This is, suggested by Mary Ann Chacko (in this volume) who argues that with the usage of print and digital media, modern discourses are being negotiated by young people in both rural and urban homes. Furthermore, education and health services in rural areas are predominantly delivered by the modern state, and young people migrating between rural and urban areas cannot be immune to modern thinking. So, the usage of everyday urban does potentially position young people in rural areas as orthodox in comparison to their urban counterparts.

In conceptualising the everyday urban, the editors also draw on an Indian interpretation for understanding social reality which they suggest is relevant for research across the Global South. However, they do not discuss how the situatedness of their interpretation enriches the readers' understanding of interaction in this part of the world. Arguably, a discussion on how an Indian perspective on the ontology of the social augments our analysis of social interaction in the Global South would be beneficial in advocating for knowledge building from the South.

The book is a resource for students and faculty of childhood and youth studies in not only the Global South but also the Global North. With its focus on modernity, it holds relevance for various disciplines and inter-disciplinary fields of study like Sociology, Anthropology, Gender Studies, International Development and Education. It offers students wishing to undertake qualitative research, a glimpse of some of the prominent ways in which this can be done, namely, ethnography, discourse analysis, interview-based research and archival analysis of documentary and video data. The book also allows functionaries in non-governmental organisations, international development organisations and officials leading state programmes for children and young people to appreciate children's daily struggles with modernity.

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来源期刊
Children & Society
Children & Society SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
17.60%
发文量
125
期刊介绍: Children & Society is an interdisciplinary journal publishing high quality research and debate on all aspects of childhood and policies and services for children and young people. The journal is based in the United Kingdom, with an international range and scope. The journal informs all those who work with and for children, young people and their families by publishing innovative papers on research and practice across a broad spectrum of topics, including: theories of childhood; children"s everyday lives at home, school and in the community; children"s culture, rights and participation; children"s health and well-being; child protection, early prevention and intervention.
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