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World of Many: Ontology and Child Development among the Maya of Southern Mexico

Part of the Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies series
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A World of Many explores the world-making efforts of Tzotzil Maya children from two different localities within the municipality of Chenalho, Chiapas.

The research demonstrates children's agency in creating their worlds, while also investigating the role played by the surrounding social and physical environment.

Different experiences with schooling, parenting, goals and values, but also with climate change, water scarcity, as well as racism and settler colonialism form part of the reason children create their emerging worlds.

These worlds are not make believe or anything less than the ontological products of their parents.

Instead, Norbert Ross argues that by creating different worlds, the children ultimately fashion themselves into different human beings - quite literally being different in the world.

A World of Many combines experimental research from the cognitive sciences with critical theory, exploring children's agency in devising their own ontologies.

Rather than treating children as somewhat incomplete humans, it understands children as tinkerers and thinkers, makers of their worlds amidst complex relations.

It regards being as a constant ontological production, where life and living constitutes activism.

Using experimental paradigms, the book shows that children locate themselves differently in these emerging worlds they create, becoming different human beings in the process.

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£307.00
Product Details
Rutgers University Press
1978830343 / 9781978830349
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
13/01/2023
English
230 pages
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