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In the past few decades, China has witnessed the emergence of a psychological discourse of childhood.This new discourse portrays children as persons with unique emotional needs and seeks to redefine childhood as a time of play and relaxation rather than study or toil. Drawing on the results of ethnographic fieldwork in Shanghai's schools and homes in 2004-2005, the present article describes the complex ways Shanghai's teachers and parents engage with this normalizing, developmental discourse. It argues that the rise of a psychological discourse of childhood signals a shift in Chinese modes of governing school and family life, and in current conceptualizations of the child-as-citizen and the child-as-subject in postsocialist, urban China.
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Orna Naftali (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a015829b124fe5819865dac — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0097700410377594
Orna Naftali
Modern China
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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