The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings
by David F. Lancy
Read about it in the New York Times: “The Only Baby Book You’ll Ever Need” (Michael Erard, 1/31/15)
The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings
by David F. Lancy
Read about it in the New York Times: “The Only Baby Book You’ll Ever Need” (Michael Erard, 1/31/15)
Registration is now open and there is no fee. Places are limited; so, early registration is advised. Register at NCCB@tcd.ie
The National Collection of Children’s Books (NCCB) is a major two-year interdisciplinary and inter-institutional project (Church of Ireland College of Education and Trinity College Dublin), funded by the Irish Research Council, which will examine children’s books collections in five libraries in Dublin: the Church of Ireland College of Education, the National Library, Pearse Street Library, St Patrick’s College, Drumcondra, and Trinity College Dublin. The research team comprises two principal investigators, Pádraic Whyte (TCD) and Keith O’Sullivan (CICE); two postdoctoral researchers, Ciara Boylan and Ciara Gallagher; and a catalogue and database developer, Paolo Defant.
For more information please visit www.nccb.tcd.ie or follow us:
http://www.facebook.com/NCCBIreland
http://www.twitter.com/NCCBIreland
Jill Shefrin, Senior Research Associate in Arts, Trinity College, University of Toronto
“Sometimes he thought…, “Why?” and sometimes he thought, “Wherefore?” and sometimes he thought, “Inasmuch as which?”: Context and the Study of Children’s Books
Prof Peter Hunt, Professor Emeritus, Cardiff University
Revolutionaries in the Library Vaults: Children’s Books Collections and the Re-Writing of Children’s Literature Studies
NCCB Research Team Speakers
Dr Keith O’Sullivan: Co-Principal Investigator, CICE
Dr Pádraic Whyte: Co-Principal Investigator, TCD
Dr Ciara Boylan: Postdoctoral Researcher, Education
Dr Ciara Gallagher: Postdoctoral Researcher, Literature
Mr Paolo Defant: Catalogue and Database Development
Panel
Dr Jarlath Killeen, Trinity College Dublin (Chair)
Dr Valerie Coghlan, Independent Scholar
Dr Lydia Ferguson, Trinity College Dublin
Dr Máire Kennedy, Pearse Street Library
Susan Parkes, Church of Ireland College of Education
Wine Reception: Long Room, Old Library, TCD
RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, Exeter, UK, 2-4 September 2015
Convened by Dr. Tara Woodyer, Dr. Diana Martin (University of Portsmouth); Dr. Sean Carter, Dr. Philip Kirby (University of Exeter)
Co-sponsored by the Political Geography Research Group and the Social and Cultural Geography Research Group
From the outset, critical geopolitics has emphasised approaches that question spatial distinctions between foreign/domestic politics and political distinctions between formal/popular geopolitics. More recently, feminist contributions to critical geopolitical debates have re-articulated the necessity of including the ‘everyday’ and the ‘ordinary’ into our accounts of the geopolitical, in part to work towards the dissolution of clear-cut distinctions between public and private, and towards the increasing realisation that different scales are not separate but intertwined. Continue reading CFP: Domesticating Geopolitics
http://webapps.yorku.ca/
The current editors are soliciting candidates for editor (or co-editors) of the journal Children, Youth and Environments
. The new editor will assume the position of editor-designate in the summer of 2015 and during the transition will begin working with the current editors Willem van Vliet, Louise Chawla and Fahriye Sancar to become familiar with journal operations and procedures. The editor-designate will assume lead responsibility for the journal beginning in the Spring of 2016, commencing with Volume 26.
Continue reading Call for Applications for Editor of Children, Youth and Environments
We are really pleased with the groundswell of interest in the 2015 ACYIG Conference to be held March 12-15 at California State University, Long Beach! With over 60 presenters on topics as varied as child/youth architectures of play to the value of using child- and youth-centered ethnography to train teachers, the conference is shaping up to be one of our very best. Conference organizers are hard at work; Please look for an email posting the Preliminary Program for the conference around February 15th.In the meantime, this is a reminder to please book your room(s) soon at the designated conference hotel, the Ayres Seal Beach Hotel. block of rooms has been held for our participants for the special price of $139 per night until February 2nd. To receive this reduced rate, call (562) 596-8330 and mention the conference code ACYIG before then.
Staying at the Ayres Seal Beach hotel is advantageous, because a free shuttle bus will leave this hotel each morning and head back to the hotel in the evening, providing you with transportation to our conference location on the California State University campus (about an 8 or 9 minute shuttle ride away).
And registering for the 2015 conference is also a snap at: https://acyig2015.eventbrite.
com! Thank you for registering for the Conference soon; the sooner folks register, the sooner we know how many will attend, and the better we can ensure space, food, and programming for all.
We look forward to seeing you soon,
Rachael Stryker
Convener, ACYIG
Dear Book Authors,
We have added an additional feature to the ACYIG conference, an area for authors to display their books. If you have a new book you would like to share with conference attendees, please notify Cindy Dell Clark, cdellclark2@gmail.com so that space can be researved for you.Thanks!!
More info on the ACYIG 2015 Conference can be found here.