BARLEY, Ruth (2018). ‘He wasn’t nice to our country’: children’s discourses about the ‘glocalized’ nature of political events in the Global North. Global Studies of Childhood. [Article]
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Barley-ChildrensDiscoursesGlocalizedfinal(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
The accessibility of new media combined with emerging patterns of migration are challenging
current definitions of community as we see a shift from close-knit face-to-face interactions
to more diverse ‘glocalized’ networks that defines community as a social rather than a spatial
dimension. These changes mean that social connections, and fundamentally a person’s sense of
belonging, have moved beyond a local neighbourhood to depend upon global networks. This was
the case for the children in the current longitudinal ethnographic study that followed one class
in a diverse primary school in the north of England every 2 years from their Reception year to
Year 6. This article draws upon data collected while the children were in Year 6, aged 10 to 11.
It uncovers the range of linguistic and semiotic resources that the children used to communicate
with their school peers about two recent political events in the Global North, namely, the United
Kingdom’s European Union (EU) Referendum in 2016 that has resulted in Brexit and the US
Presidential Election in late 2016 and Donald Trump’s Inauguration in early 2017. Unearthing the
‘glocalized’ discourses in the children’s narratives, this article uncovers the connections that the
children made between these political events and their nuclear family’s experiences living in the
United Kingdom and their extended family’s experiences in their countries of origin. In providing
an account of the children’s discourses surrounding these political events, this article uncovers
the ways in which sociopolitical events of global significance become meaningful for this group
of children and reveals that the children understand the global as situated, constructed within
specific contexts and influenced by local interpretations. As the children orientate themselves
to media depictions of these events, their shifting perceptions of global politics alongside their
intersecting experiences of racial, national and religious inequalities come to the fore in their peer
interactions at school.
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