Small Wars gathers together a hard-hitting series of essays that
demonstrate how, at the close of the twentieth century, the
world's children are affected by global political-economic
structures and by everyday practices embedded in the micro-level
interactions of local cultures. Perceived as avenging spirits of
aborted fetuses in Japan; as obstacles to, or desired commodities
of, narcissistic adult fulfillment in North America; as foot
soldiers cast onto the paths of drug wars in Spanish Harlem and
ethnic wars in the former Yugoslavia; and as "street
kids" and public enemies of the middle classes in Brazil,
children--these authors suggest--are losing ground. The modern
conception of the child as vulnerable and needing protection is
giving way to that of the child as miniature adult, a full-circle
return to Philippe Ariès's notion of premodern childhood.
The authors raise vital questions about social and structural
violence and its impact on children and families; about policies
that portray children as innocent victims on the one hand and as
irredeemable criminals on the other; and about the global economic
and political conditions that place many of the world's
children at risk. Providing groundbreaking contributions to the
contemporary social history and ethnography of childhood, this
volume will be important to readers across the social
sciences.
Table of contents:
CONTRIBUTORS:
Daphna Birenbaum-Carmeli
Philippe Bourgois
John A. Brett
Caroline B. Brettell
Donna M. Goldstein
Matthew C. Gutmann
Michael Harris
Daniel Hoffman
Jill E. Korbin
J. S. La Fontaine
Leonard B. Lerer
Lynn M. Morgan
Susan Niermeyer
Maria B. Olujic
Mary Picone
Elizabeth F. S. Roberts
Carolyn Sargent
Nancy Scheper-Hughes
Meira Weiss
Linda M. Whiteford
"The extraordinary essays in this collection will make you think and, most likely, make you furious."--"San Francisco Bay Guardian
Nancy Scheper-Hughes is Professor and Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. Her many publications include two award-winning books published by California, Death Without Weeping (1992), and Saints, Scholars, and Schizophrenics (1979). Carolyn Sargent, author of Maternity, Medicine, and Power (California, 1989) and coeditor with Robbie Davis-Floyd of Childbirth and Authoritative Knowledge (California, 1997), is Professor of Anthropology and Director of Women's Studies at Southern Methodist University.