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Hackett, Abigail – Global Studies of Childhood, 2022
By troubling notions of time-as-progress and human exceptionality, this paper considers what shifts in conceptualisations of children's literacies and futures might be possible in the context of faltering of capitalist logics of progress. The paper draws on a 3 year ethnographic study with families and young children in northern England, which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Toddlers, Young Children, Literacy
Truman, Sarah E.; Hackett, Abigail; Pahl, Kate; McLean Davies, Larissa; Escott, Hugh – Reading Research Quarterly, 2021
The authors considered the capacious feeling that emerges from saying no to literacy practices, and the affective potential of saying no "as" a literacy practice. The authors highlight the affective possibilities of saying no to normative understandings of literacy, thinking with a series of vignettes in which children, young people, and…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Affective Behavior, Resistance (Psychology), Humanism
Hackett, Abigail; Somerville, Margaret – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2017
This paper examines the potential of posthumanism to enable a reconceptualisation of young children's literacies from the starting point of movement and sound in the more-than-human world. We propose movement as a communicative practice that always occurs as a more complex entanglement of relations within more-than-human worlds. Through our…
Descriptors: Literacy, Young Children, Humanism, Movement Education