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The Invention of Childhood Creativity

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The Invention of Childhood Creativity Synopsis

This text offers a comprehensive analysis of the concept of the modern creative and imaginative child in Western education. Drawing on archived sources and historical works, it reframes childhood creativity as a social, cultural, and scientific construction, asking how our thinking and acting toward the creative child have been produced historically. The text dissects the discursive construction of creativity as a natural and developmental attribute of the child. It argues that the idea of the White creative child, constructed through comparative reasoning, shaped by primitivism, and illustrated through botanical metaphors as close to nature and the senses, is a notion embedded with colonialities, forming part of a Western civilizing project and entrenched power-knowledge relations. A compelling and original account of childhood creativity, this text will appeal to researchers in arts education, early childhood education, curriculum studies, and the history of education.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780367503642
Publication date:
Author: Cat Martins
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 202 pages
Series: Routledge Cultural Studies in Knowledge, Curriculum, and Education
Genres: Teaching of a specific subject
Pre-school and kindergarten
Primary and middle schools
Philosophy and theory of education