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Care and Agency: The Andean Community through the Eyes of Children (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)

Care and Agency: The Andean Community through the Eyes of Children (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)

Current price: $150.00
Publication Date: October 11th, 2024
Publisher:
Rutgers University Press
ISBN:
9781978840744
Pages:
194

Description

Andean communities occupy a special place in the history of anthropology, having given shape to fundamental theories of kinship, peasant economics, indigenous medical systems, ritual life and others. Yet children have been shortchanged in research and theory-building. Care and Agency, based on detailed ethnographies of six towns in the province of Yauyos, restores children to a central research position. Contemporary children’s studies emphasize children’s agency and autonomy, and these take surprising forms under the conditions of the rural Andes. At the same time, the book incorporates and extends current discussions of caregiving and its organization in human societies. Children in the Andes are involved in the care of each other, of adults, of animals, of the environment. The activities, sociality, and subjective states of children of different ages, genders, and social strata are variable in ways that make it impossible to speak of a single Andean childhood. The future they face is also uncertain, as the Peruvian nation stumbles through cycles of incompetent government whose common thread is the neglect of small-scale family farming and the welfare of rural populations. A fascinating look at Andean childhood for anyone interested in the lives of children. 
 

Praise for Care and Agency: The Andean Community through the Eyes of Children (Rutgers Series in Childhood Studies)

"Care and Agency offers a comprehensive and vivid account of the lives of Andean children in rural areas and how they actively participate in caring for themselves and for others, questioning at the same time the uncertain futures they and their communities face. The book is a unique contribution and a fundamental reading for educators, health workers, policy makers, social workers, and researchers."


— Patricia Ames

"Jeanine Anderson and Jessaca B. Leinaweaver engage contemporary debates in the anthropology of children to examine a set of biographies of young Yauyinos marked by high responsibilities, vulnerability, and uncertainty, in a context of constant transformation. This is a timely and lucid contribution to the understanding of how new generations conduct their lives within traditional, yet changing, rural communities."
— Patricia Oliart