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ABOUT THE COVER

Re-Queering Queer Youth Development: A Post-Developmental Approach to Childhood and Pedagogy

Pages 74-95 | Published online: 11 Oct 2008
 

ABSTRACT

Contemporary reflection on queer-radical and queer-deconstructionist curricula has only marginally included a radical deconstruction of the principle of curricula itself. This article explores this “hidden discourse” by referencing the idea of curricular subjectivity and proposes a contextualizing perspective on the politicized interplay between psychogenetic (“developmental”) and socio-genetic (historical) notions of the “queer.” Taking the notion of the child as a proto-queer, it offers a queer ramification of maturity and its politicized calculus.

An earlier version of this article has been presented to the 3rd International “Queer Zagreb” Conference “Heteronormativity of Childhood,” September 9–11, 2005 in Zagreb, Croatia.

Notes

1. From a letter written by “an experienced master in one of the most famous English public schools” to Havelock Ellis, quoted in Auto-Erotism.

2. CitationHavelock Ellis (1901) presented some of the very first sexual histories in clinical literature that were to delineate normative trajectories, while Von Krafft-Ebing's work with the sexual anamnesis commenced in the 1870s. The notion of normal sex histories was clearly modelled on the genre of queer and “perverse” anamnesis.

3. More generally, a propaedeutic system is a regulatory, disciplinary structure which recruits, steers, and delivers individuals in a way deemed productive by the contemporary ideological apparatus, commonly a ritualized succession of stepwise inaugurations. “Sexual propaedeusis” was central to what van Ussel called the “western anti-sexual syndrome.” A popular edition of his 1967 two-volume dissertation proved influential in the Dutch 1970s call for “free love” for youth (Citationvan Ussel, 1968).

4. Problems arise where Foucault, referencing Schérer and Hocquenghem's subversive work Co-Ire (1976) talks about “the child,” and also where the late Foucault refers to “veritable prisons”: (1) the referencing of life phases as “monolithic cultural categories” (e.g., CitationBurman, 1995); and (2) Foucault's quintessential notion of disciplinary power which he developed in the mid-1970s.

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