Description

Book Synopsis

The Anthropocene is, firstly, a discourse of the earth systems sciences. However, if humans - in all their historical, cultural, social, economic and political diversity – are differently implicated in the emergence and consequences of the Anthropocene, then Childhood and Youth Studies must critically engage with, and contribute to, debates about these planetary wide changes and their consequences for children and young people.

Well-being, resilience, and enterprise are keywords in many policy, academic and community discourses about contemporary populations of children and young people around the globe. Most often these key-words take the form of psycho-biological based encouragements for young people to care for their own physical, mental and social health and well-being, to develop their resilience, and to become enterprising in a world that is taken-for-granted as being challenging and disruptive.

This collection brings a multi-disciplinary focus to discussions about children and young people’s well-being, resilience, and enterprise to develop new ways of troubling these keywords at a time when planetary systems – atmospheric, oceanic, terran, capitalist - are in crisis.



Table of Contents

Part 1

Plastics, Soils, Water, Weather and Waste: The Materialities of Childhoods in the Anthropocene

Chapter 1: Plastic childhoods (and more): visceralities, vortices, vectors, virtualities Peter Kraftl

Chapter 2: Resilience as more-than-human Mindy Blaise, Jo Pollitt, Jane Merewether, and Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw

Chapter 3: Soil as Kin: Unearthing Old Ways Aviva Reed

Chapter 4: Living in the Anthropocene Adrianne Bacelar de Castro and Sarah Hennessy

Part 2

Temporalities and Spaces: Young People’s Anthropocenes

Chapter 5: Blasted Places: Smog, Steel and Stigma in a Post-industrial Town Anoop Nayak

Chapter 6: The net of heaven is vast, vast…’: Rethinking a philosophy for youth work in the Anthropocene Kerry Montero

Chapter 7: The Anthropocene and the two-faced responsibility of young people in the European welfare regimes Kari Paakkunainen, Juhani Saari, and Juri Mykkanen

Chapter 8: Young People and the Anthropocene: Futures, Past and Present? Peter Kelly

Part 3

Knowing and Naming Young People and the Anthropocene

Chapter 9: Hacking the Political Economy of Youth Shane Duggan

Chapter 10: Youth in/of the Anthropocene: Kindred Ecologies for a Digital Warming World Kate Tilleczek

Chapter 11: Is there such a thing as youth in the Anthropocene? Michael Marder

Coda Martxel Mariskal

Young People and Thinking Technologies for the

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    £72.90

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    RRP £81.00 – you save £8.10 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Peter Kraftl, Peter Kelly, Diego Carbajo Padilla

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Young People and Thinking Technologies for the by Peter Kraftl

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 16/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9781538153628, 978-1538153628
      ISBN10: 1538153629

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The Anthropocene is, firstly, a discourse of the earth systems sciences. However, if humans - in all their historical, cultural, social, economic and political diversity – are differently implicated in the emergence and consequences of the Anthropocene, then Childhood and Youth Studies must critically engage with, and contribute to, debates about these planetary wide changes and their consequences for children and young people.

      Well-being, resilience, and enterprise are keywords in many policy, academic and community discourses about contemporary populations of children and young people around the globe. Most often these key-words take the form of psycho-biological based encouragements for young people to care for their own physical, mental and social health and well-being, to develop their resilience, and to become enterprising in a world that is taken-for-granted as being challenging and disruptive.

      This collection brings a multi-disciplinary focus to discussions about children and young people’s well-being, resilience, and enterprise to develop new ways of troubling these keywords at a time when planetary systems – atmospheric, oceanic, terran, capitalist - are in crisis.



      Table of Contents

      Part 1

      Plastics, Soils, Water, Weather and Waste: The Materialities of Childhoods in the Anthropocene

      Chapter 1: Plastic childhoods (and more): visceralities, vortices, vectors, virtualities Peter Kraftl

      Chapter 2: Resilience as more-than-human Mindy Blaise, Jo Pollitt, Jane Merewether, and Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw

      Chapter 3: Soil as Kin: Unearthing Old Ways Aviva Reed

      Chapter 4: Living in the Anthropocene Adrianne Bacelar de Castro and Sarah Hennessy

      Part 2

      Temporalities and Spaces: Young People’s Anthropocenes

      Chapter 5: Blasted Places: Smog, Steel and Stigma in a Post-industrial Town Anoop Nayak

      Chapter 6: The net of heaven is vast, vast…’: Rethinking a philosophy for youth work in the Anthropocene Kerry Montero

      Chapter 7: The Anthropocene and the two-faced responsibility of young people in the European welfare regimes Kari Paakkunainen, Juhani Saari, and Juri Mykkanen

      Chapter 8: Young People and the Anthropocene: Futures, Past and Present? Peter Kelly

      Part 3

      Knowing and Naming Young People and the Anthropocene

      Chapter 9: Hacking the Political Economy of Youth Shane Duggan

      Chapter 10: Youth in/of the Anthropocene: Kindred Ecologies for a Digital Warming World Kate Tilleczek

      Chapter 11: Is there such a thing as youth in the Anthropocene? Michael Marder

      Coda Martxel Mariskal

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