Making a Place for Pleasure in Early Childhood Education
WARNING
You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com
Edited by Joseph J. Tobin
Out of Print
The contributors to this book explore how caretakers of preschool children and other adults have overreacted to fears about child abuse. Drawing on feminist, queer, and poststructural theories, the authors argue for the restoration of pleasure as a goal of early childhood education.
Joseph J. Tobin is associate professor of curriculum and instruction at the University of Hawaii, Manoa. He is coauthor of Preschool in Three Cultures: Japan, China, and the United States and editor/contributor to Remade in Japan: Everyday Life and Consumer Taste in a Changing Society, both published by Yale University Press.
"This is a highly original piece of work, with exemplary scholarship. It raises a lot of interesting issues in a thoroughly persuasive and extremely well-grounded manner."—Michael O'Loughlin
"[This] book is essential for graduate school reading and debate. It opens the need for further research, study and discussion of the paranoia inherent in the 'no touch' theory."—Choice
"Making a Place for Pleasure in Early Childhood Education draws on theories of culture, gender, and sexuality that don’t usually appear in education research."—Chronicle of Higher Education
Publication Date: April 24, 1997