Moron, Sick, and Perverted - Injurious Speech: Advocacy for Gender Equity in Early Childhood
Keywords:
Queer Decisions in Early Childhood Teacher Education, Teachers as Advocates for Gender Non-conforming and Sexual Minority Young Children and FamiliesAbstract
This article describes feminist post-structuralist attempts to enact anti-bias education as resistance to sexisms and heterosexisms in Australian early childhood education. We describe what this form of activism for anti-bias gender equity work looks like for some educators, children, and academics in the Australian early childhood classroom and in the public arena. We then use concepts of discourse and relations of power to link these examples with their location in dominant discourses of gender and childhood innocence. Drawing from the experiences of Kylie Smith, we ask the following questions: What are the challenges and risks for educators and others in ‘doing’ anti-bias work that resists gendered discrimination in the early childhood space, particularly in advocating for gender diversity and multiplicity? What support from government policy, funding strategies, and early childhood services is necessary for educators to continue their own forms of activism for anti-bias education? We explore Hillevi Lenz Taguchi’s (2005) understandings of the problematic and potential of “getting personal in feminist pedagogy” (p. 248) and Judith Butler’s ideas on performativity and injurious speech. These concepts have helped us find ways to negotiate the research questions and continue the roller coaster ride(s) of activism for anti-bias gender equity work.
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