ABSTRACT

This book highlights the significance of an interdisciplinary approach to understanding children and childhoods in the Indian context. While it is recognised that multiple kinds of childhoods exist in India, policy and practice approaches to working with children are still based on a singular model of the ideal child rooted in certain Western traditions. The book challenges readers to go beyond the acknowledgement of differences to evolving alternate models to this conception of children and childhoods.

Bringing together well-known scholars from history, politics, sociology, child development, paediatrics and education, the volume represents four major themes: the history and politics of childhoods; deconstructing childhoods by analysing their representations in art, mythology and culture in India; selected facets of childhoods as constructed through education and schooling; and understanding issues related to law, policy and practice, as they pertain to children and childhoods. This important book will be useful to scholars and researchers of education, especially those working in the domains of child development, sociology of education, educational psychology, public policy and South Asian studies.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

part I|64 pages

History and politics of childhood

chapter 1|21 pages

Colonial modernity and the ‘child figure’

Reconfiguring the multiplicity in ‘multiple childhoods’

chapter 2|19 pages

Did girls have a childhood in the past?

Mythologies, ideologies, histories

part II|118 pages

Sociocultural perspectives

chapter 4|22 pages

Childhood, culture and the social sciences

What we have gained and what we may be in the process of losing

chapter 5|21 pages

Parent-child relations

Changing contours and emerging trends

chapter 6|27 pages

Bala Krishna

A paradigm of childhood relevant to the present time

chapter 7|24 pages

Baccha log, taali bajao*

Orphans in cinematic imagination 1

part III|94 pages

Education and schooling

chapter 10|23 pages

Education and gender *

A critical analysis of policies in India

chapter 11|23 pages

Childhood as ‘risky’ and life as ‘skills’

Social implications of psycho-educational programmes

chapter 12|22 pages

Cultures of fear

Children in school

part IV|121 pages

Law, practice and policy

chapter 15|23 pages

Food and nutrition in childhood

Ensuring dietary adequacy, diversity and choice

chapter 16|28 pages

Social policy and research interface

Challenges and prospects

chapter |20 pages

Epilogue – Child rights

A dialogue