Tracing the complex yet intimate relationship between a present-day national obsession with childhood and a colonial past with which Australia as a nation has not adequately come to terms, Young and Free draws on philosophy, literature, film and testimony. The result is a demonstration of how anxiety about childhood has become a screen for more fundamental and intractable issues that vex Australian social and political life. Joanne Faulkner argues that by interpreting these anxieties in their relation to settler-colonial Australia's unresolved conflict with Aboriginal people, new ways of conceiving of Australian community may be opened. The book engages with philosophical and literary characterizations of childhood, from Locke and Rousseau, to Freud, Bergson, Benjamin Agamben, Lacan, Rancière and Halbwachs. The author's psychoanalytic approach is supplemented by an engagement with contemporary political philosophy that informs Faulkner's critique of the concepts of the subject, sovereignty and knowledge, resulting in a speculative postcolonial model of the subject. Cover artist credit: Lyndsay Bird Mpetyane Artwork title: Ahakeye (Bush Plum)



Autorentext

Joanne Faulkner is Lecturer in Philosophy and Women's and Gender Studies, in the School of Humanities and Languages at the University of New South Wales.

Titel
Young and Free
Untertitel
[Post]colonial Ontologies of Childhood, Memory and History in Australia
EAN
9798216329084
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
03.05.2016
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.79 MB
Anzahl Seiten
248