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ISBN: PB: 9780300192407

Yale University Press

October 2013

288 pp.

23.4x15.6 cm

PB:
£14,99
QTY:

Categories:

Childism

Confronting Prejudice Against Children

In this groundbreaking volume on the human rights of children, acclaimed analyst, political theorist, and biographer Elisabeth Young-Bruehl argues that prejudice exists against children as a group and that it is comparable to racism, sexism, and homophobia. This prejudice – "childism" – legitimates and rationalizes a broad continuum of acts that are not "in the best interests of children", including the often violent extreme of child abuse and neglect.

According to Young-Bruehl, reform is possible only if we acknowledge this prejudice in its basic forms and address the motives and cultural forces that drive it, rather than dwell on the various categories of abuse and punishment. "There will always be individuals and societies that turn on their children", writes Young-Bruehl, "breaking the natural order Aristotle described two and a half millennia ago in his 'Nichomachean Ethics'". In "Childism", Young-Bruehl focuses especially on the ways in which Americans have departed from the child-supportive trends of the Great Society and of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Many years in the making, "Childism" draws upon a wide range of sources, from the literary and philosophical to the legal and psychoanalytic. Woven into this extraordinary volume are case studies that illuminate the profound importance of listening to the victims who have so much to tell us about the visible and invisible ways in which childism is expressed.

About the Author

Elisabeth Young-Bruehl is a faculty member at the Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research and a practising psychoanalyst. She received her Ph.D. in Philosophy under Hannah Arendt's supervision at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research.

Reviews

"By giving a name to the prejudice against children, Young-Bruehl makes it possible for us to see what is right before our eyes. It's not easy to speak about this prejudice – it comes too close to home – and yet Young-Bruehl does so in a way that is engaging, intelligent, humane, and enlightening. Read this book, and then give it to your partner, your friends, your representatives. This is something we can change" – Carol Gilligan, author of "In a Different Voice"