Publication | Open Access
Modest witness(ing) and lively stories: paying attention to matters of concern in early childhood
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Citations
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2016
Year
This article considers the role of early childhood education within these uncertain times of human induced climate change. It draws from feminism and environmental humanities to experiment with different ways of becoming-with the world. By bringing together Donna Haraway’s figure of the Modest Witness and Deborah Bird Rose’s notion of witnessing, the article rethinks what it means to ‘observe’ in terms of ethical response-ability and matters of concern. Data from a multisensory and multispecies ethnography are used to illuminate the observational practices that commonly take place in early childhood settings. The article concludes by employing ‘lively stories’ showing how modest witness(ing) reworks early childhood observations traditionally considered apolitical, distanced, and judgmental towards meaning making as a form of entanglements and open-ended dialogue. Modest witness(ing) attempts to put into practice initial ethical and political pedagogies that early childhood teachers can draw from and begin to address matters of concern in their own settings.
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