ABSTRACT

Unsettling the Colonial Places and Spaces of Early Childhood Education uncovers and interrogates some of the inherent colonialist tensions that are rarely acknowledged and often unwittingly rehearsed within contemporary early childhood education. Through building upon the prior postcolonial interventions of prominent early childhood scholars, Unsettling the Colonial Places and Spaces of Early Childhood Education reveals how early childhood education is implicated in the colonialist project of predominantly immigrant (post)colonial settler societies. By politicizing the silences around these specifically settler colonialist tensions, it seeks to further unsettle the innocence presumptions of early childhood education and to offer some decolonizing strategies for early childhood practitioners and scholars. Grounding their inquiries in early childhood education, the authors variously engage with postcolonial theory, place theory, feminist philosophy, the ecological humanities and indigenous onto-epistemologies.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Unsettling the Colonial Places and Spaces of Early Childhood Education in Settler Colonial Societies

section |59 pages

Unsettling Places

chapter |22 pages

Forest Stories

Restorying Encounters with “Natural” Places in Early Childhood Education

chapter |20 pages

Unsettling Pedagogies Through Common World Encounters

Grappling with (Post-)Colonial Legacies in Canadian Forests and Australian Bushlands

section |65 pages

Unsettling Spaces

chapter |16 pages

Te Whāriki in Aotearoa New Zealand

Witnessing and Resisting Neo-liberal and Neo-colonial Discourses in Early Childhood Education

chapter |17 pages

Teaching in the Borderlands

Stories from Texas

section |74 pages

Unsettling Indigenous/Settler Relations

chapter |15 pages

Disentangling? Re-entanglement?

Tackling the Pervasiveness of Colonialism in Early Childhood (Teacher) Education in Aotearoa

chapter |22 pages

Unsettling Yarns

Reinscribing Indigenous Architectures, Contemporary Dreamings, and Newcomer Belongings on Ngunnawal Country, Australia

chapter |21 pages

Thinking with Land, Water, Ice, and Snow

A Proposal for Inuit Nunangat Pedagogy in the Canadian Arctic