Article

Policy utopias, sci-fi dystopias, and contemporary contests over childhood in education reform in the UK

Details

Citation

Williamson B (2010) Policy utopias, sci-fi dystopias, and contemporary contests over childhood in education reform in the UK. Journal of Children and Media, 4 (2), pp. 206-222. https://doi.org/10.1080/17482791003629669

Abstract
Educational policy and children’s science fiction literature provide two distinct visions of the future for children and corresponding representations of the future of childhood. By refracting the literary and the political through a sociological critique, this article scrutinizes how such texts construct ideas about childhood and thus motivate an impetus for social and economic change, especially in the context of children’s digital media use and the reform of children’s services. In particular, I focus on the way literary studies scholars represent childhood in their readings of science fiction texts, and on the political construction of childhood in policy texts such as reports to the public and in high-profile media campaigns including teacher recruitment advertisements displayed in the UK between 2006 and 2008. The analysis suggests there are intertextual associations as well as disassociations in the discourses of childhood found in sci-fi and educational policy.

Keywords
children; children's literature; education policy; personalization

Journal
Journal of Children and Media: Volume 4, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/10176
PublisherTaylor and Francis
ISSN1748-2798
eISSN1748-2801