Common Good: New openings for thinking about Care in ECEC

Niklas Alexander Chimirri, Gloria Quiñones, Ditte Alexandra Winther-Lindqvist

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Abstract

The concept and phenomenon of care and caring, has received only little attention in cultural-historical theory (Winther-Lindqvist 2020). Meanwhile, many other theoretical perspectives have as of late further developed the concept, among others (eco-)feminism, posthumanism, and other new materialisms. For example, feminist and moral philosopher Tronto (1993) argues that care is culturally diverse and is both a political practice and a disposition. Others like Langford and colleagues (2017) suggest that care is an ethical activity that encompasses a democratic discussion that is central to care giving and receiving (Duhn & Quinones 2018). Situating the discussion around care in the ECEC setting, and basing it in cultural-historical theory and some of these new approaches to caring for children, this symposium explores and discusses caring well in broader terms, as also a question of caring with the world and the more than human (Chimirri, 2019). Extending the idea of care as a broader concept, from a cultural-historical position we raise critical, ethical and educational discussions of the concept’s relation to axiological ideals of the ‘good life’. Hedegaard’s (2019) wholeness approach places attention to how societies provide conditions and form ideas about their expectations of a good life for all their citizens. In particular, parents have an important role in identifying what a good life and future of children means in terms of their values for shaping their life. Such cultural values for a good life for children are important when understanding the child’s social situation including their emotional well-being. In the symposium, we empirically depart from educators’ and parents’ perspectives of ‘common good’ as central values inhabited in CALD (culturally and linguistically diverse) communities in Australia, alongside young children’s multisensory and intergenerational learning in Danish ECEC forest projects. On these grounds, we discuss the question: what does it mean to care well for the common good of others?, as a new opening for thinking about care in ECEC and cultural-historical theorizing.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date2022
Publication statusPublished - 2022
EventCHACDOC 2022 Conference: Zone of proximal development, Care and Social Sustainability in children’s development - Konventum, Helsingør, Denmark
Duration: 2 Oct 20224 Oct 2022
https://events.au.dk/chacdoc2022

Conference

ConferenceCHACDOC 2022 Conference
LocationKonventum
Country/TerritoryDenmark
CityHelsingør
Period02/10/202204/10/2022
OtherThe concept of sustainability is topical in many societal discussions. Across the different contributions, we invite to an exploration of whether and how the concept can contribute relevantly to conceptual development within the cultural-historical framework with relation to care and development. How can we understand the concept of sustainability in relation the social situation of development? How can we explore and theoretically specify sustainability as a concept, for example in relation to child care, the zone of proximal development for children and practices for supporting atypical development? The purpose of the conference is to explore and elaborate our understanding of sustainability, care and the zone of proximal development through inspiring presentations and discussions.
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