BARLEY, Ruth (2018). Exploring young children's gendered discourses about skin colour. Ethnography and Education, 1-17. [Article]
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Barley-ExploringYoungChildrensGenderedDiscourses.pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
Drawing on an ethnographic study conducted with young children
(4–5 year olds) in a multi-ethnic Early Years classroom in the north of England this paper shows how young children’s discourses about skin colour are informed by intersections with their gender identities. This ethnography uncovers how young children engage with the related concepts of ‘race’/ethnicity, racialisation and
racism in their peer interactions alongside how they appropriate ‘markers of difference’ to promote their own identity and ascribe an identity to their peers. By comparing the discourses collectively produced by two groups of children in the class this study argues
that there is a need for whiteness to be educationally discoursed in a way that uncovers the violence of racism and exposes the cultural and political privileges of
‘being white.’
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