Revolutionary Love: Early Childhood Education as Counter-Culture
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Love in Action
‘Once outside, Jane sees several children busy painting the big wooden board that she had Mr Banks attach to the fence the night before. She tells the children ‘the colours they have chosen are so lovely!’ She smiles as she sees them making good use of the small rollers and big brushes that she had laid out earlier. Her attention is quickly drawn away by shrieks of delights from Annie at the bottom of the slide. ‘Da da! I did it, Miss Jane! I did I did!’ yells Annie, arms thrown high triumphantly. ‘You did? By yourself!’ replies Jane animatedly. ‘Did it, did it, did it!’ Annie sings as she marches about. Jane wraps Annie in a big hug and says ‘I knew you could, you wonderful girl! You practised and practised and look what you did! You are so brave and strong! You can do anything!’ As Annie runs off, Thomas approaches Jane, something tightly clenched in his fist. ‘What have you there Thomas?’ asks Jane. Thomas holds out his hand to reveal a shrivelled and very dirty green bean from the nursery garden. ‘Bean’ replies Thomas, rather proudly. ‘A bean. How wonderful!’ replies Jane, ‘So Mrs Sanjay didn’t get all of the last vegetables, did she?’ Thomas shakes his head, indicating ‘no’. ‘Did you pick it for our vegetable soup?’ Thomas smiles broadly. ‘Brilliant, Thomas’, says Jane. ‘Shall we bring this to Mrs Sanjay to wash up and add to our soup?’ Thomas takes Jane’s hand they walk together back inside’.
2. Love and Human Evolution
3. Love, Faith and Social Sustainability
4. Love in a Time of Neoliberalism
5. Conclusions: From Maternal Care to Love and Compassion
‘Eva was asleep on a mattress on the floor. Rainee knelt down beside Eva. She bent right down to obtain eye contact. Rainee gently stroked the back of Eva’s head while quietly calling, ‘Hello’ in a sing-songy voice. Eva reciprocated by lifting her head up, looked at Rainee, rocked back on to her knees, rubbed her eyes and moved her head from side to side before lying down again. Rainee lowered her head to maintain eye contact with Eva. Eva reached out for her teddy which was at the top of her mattress whilst Rainee continued to stroke Eva’s head and talked to her until Eva was fully awake. Eva pointed to something on the other side of the room and Rainee said, ‘What’s that?’ Eva got to her knees and then stood up. Rainee remained on her knees so that she maintained eye contact. Eva said ‘Oh, Oh’, which Rainee echoed followed by, ‘I’m awake, I’m awake’. Eva appeared to be unsteady on her feet so Rainee, who was still kneeling, supported Eva by holding her hand. Eva sat down on Rainee’s knee to drink a cup of milk, which was bought in by a practitioner. Rainee put her arm round Eva’s back to support her whilst gently stroking Eva’s leg. Rainee continued to talk in soft tones when responding to Eva’s cues’.[66]
‘I heard of an incident in one nursery where several young nursery staff were in a room with a small child who had just been told off for doing something wrong. The toddler was crying desperately in a corner. The administrator then came into the room and asked if any of them were going to talk to the child or comfort her. Their collective response was ‘I’m not her key worker…’.[73]
‘All of these toddlers are approximately eighteen months. It is difficult to capture the activity that swirls around us. There is an ebb and flow of emotions, activities and energies. It is challenging to observe, as my attention is like the toddlers themselves, moving and shifting as they do. Perhaps I am picking upon on their energy. I like being here and I like their energy…They notice tiny details with joy and intensity, delighting in the discovery. They are moving, running, climbing, pushing someone for the sheer joy of it. The caregivers, calmly and quietly, are describing movement, texture, surface—‘it’s slippery, wet, rough’. The children watch each other with concern, curiosity, familiarity. … Noses running, tears flowing. ‘Come sit on my lap’, standing still, crying, desolate. Mel, a caregiver, puts out her arms. Elisha lifts hers and Mel picks her up. Others run and smile and laugh, aware of Elisha’s unhappiness and yet enjoying the sun, the warmth of late October’. Such writing is an act of cultural remembering and validation of love, both giving and receiving, as the essential characteristic of human beings.
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Conflicts of Interest
References
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Taggart, G. Revolutionary Love: Early Childhood Education as Counter-Culture. Sustainability 2022, 14, 4474. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084474
Taggart G. Revolutionary Love: Early Childhood Education as Counter-Culture. Sustainability. 2022; 14(8):4474. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084474
Chicago/Turabian StyleTaggart, Geoff. 2022. "Revolutionary Love: Early Childhood Education as Counter-Culture" Sustainability 14, no. 8: 4474. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084474
APA StyleTaggart, G. (2022). Revolutionary Love: Early Childhood Education as Counter-Culture. Sustainability, 14(8), 4474. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084474