社论

IF 0.8 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Childhood in the Past Pub Date : 2020-01-02 DOI:10.1080/17585716.2020.1744829
E. Murphy
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The theme of the conference was ‘Adolescence’ with the aim of exploring how scholars from diverse fields of research can offer nuanced insight into the lives of those occupying this unique stage in the life course in the past. The conference commenced on the Wednesday evening with a keynote presentation by Jane Eva Baxter of DePaul University, USA, on the topic of the late nineteenth/ early twentieth-century invention of adolescence, followed by a wine reception. The following two action-packed days saw the delivery of some nineteen papers and five posters across six thematic sessions What is Adolescence? Shifting Perceptions Over Time and Space; The Written Lives of Adolescents; The Material Culture of Adolescence; Little Adults? Rites of Passage from Childhood to Adulthood; Deviancy, Rebellion, and Punishment, and Advances in Accessing Adolescence in Bioarchaeology. On the Friday morning Mary Lewis of the University of Reading, UK, delivered a keynote talk on the topic of the bioarchaeology of adolescence. The conference also saw the introduction of a prize for the best student podium presentation kindly sponsored by the journal Antiquity. This was awarded to Katherine Woodhouse of Loughborough University, UK, for her paper entitled ‘Rebels With a Cause: Conversion and “Meaningful” Rebellion in Eighteenth-Century Methodist Narratives of Female Adolescence’. The conference was a truly international affair which brought together scholars from eight countries and crossed three continents. The Society is very grateful to the conference organizers for all their efforts in arranging the event on this fascinating theme within past childhood research. In addition to the annual conference, a SSCIP-sponsored session entitled ‘Health and Welfare of Children in the Past’ was organized by Esme Hookway and Kirsty Squires of Staffordshire University at the 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology which took place on the 10th–14th April in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Speakers from New Zealand, Mexico, and the UK came together to explore a range of topics, including childhood health and disease, the care of children, funerary treatment, and the welfare of children in the work-place. Ian Gonzalez Alaña (independent researcher), Mélie Le Roy and Eileen Murphy of Queen’s University Belfast, organized a SSCIP-sponsored session entitled ‘Systemic Approaches to Juvenile Funerary Rituals. Atypical, Deviant or Normative? Going Beyond Paradigms’ at the 25th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists that took place on the 4th– 7th September in Bern, Switzerland. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

我非常高兴地欢迎您阅读《过去的童年》第十三卷春季版,这是过去的童年研究学会(SSCIP)的期刊。本期以Farah Mendlesohn受邀撰写的一篇发人深省的文章开始,该文章探讨了与历史小说相关的儿童书籍类型。法拉于2017年在英国斯塔福德郡大学发表了该学会的首届两年一度的讲座,我们很高兴她能够写下这篇文章,让所有无法参加讲座的人都能更多地了解她有趣的研究。2019年是SSCIP繁忙的一年。第十二届SSCIP国际会议由Katie Hemer和Sophie Newman于10月30日至11月1日组织,由谢菲尔德大学谢菲尔德儿童考古中心主办。会议的主题是“青春期”,目的是探索来自不同研究领域的学者如何对过去生活过程中占据这一独特阶段的人的生活提供细致入微的见解。会议于周三晚上开始,美国德保禄大学的Jane Eva Baxter就19世纪末/20世纪初青春期的发明发表了主题演讲,随后举行了葡萄酒招待会。在接下来的两天里,在六个主题会议上发表了大约十九篇论文和五张海报。什么是青春期?观念随时间和空间的变化;青少年的书面生活;青春期的物质文化;小大人?从童年到成年的成人仪式;偏差、反抗和惩罚,以及生物考古学中接近青春期的进展。周五上午,英国雷丁大学的Mary Lewis就青春期的生物考古学发表了主题演讲。会议还推出了由《古董》杂志赞助的最佳学生演讲奖。英国拉夫堡大学的Katherine Woodhouse因其题为“有原因的反叛者:18世纪卫理公会女性青春期叙事中的皈依和“有意义的”反叛”的论文而获得该奖项。这次会议是一次真正的国际性会议,来自八个国家、横跨三大洲的学者齐聚一堂。学会非常感谢会议组织者在过去的儿童研究中为安排这一迷人主题的活动所做的一切努力。除了年会之外,斯塔福德郡大学的Esme Hookway和Kirsty Squires在4月10-14日于新墨西哥州阿尔伯克基举行的美国考古学会第84届年会上组织了一场由SSCIP赞助的题为“过去儿童的健康和福利”的会议。来自新西兰、墨西哥和英国的演讲者聚集在一起探讨了一系列主题,包括儿童健康和疾病、儿童护理、葬礼治疗和工作场所儿童福利。贝尔法斯特女王大学的Ian Gonzalez Alaña(独立研究员)、Mélie Le Roy和Eileen Murphy组织了一次由SSCIP赞助的题为“青少年葬礼的系统方法”的会议。非典型、变异还是规范?9月4日至7日在瑞士伯尔尼举行的欧洲考古学家协会第25届年会上,“超越范式”。这是一次非常受欢迎的会议,有22次口头演讲和4张海报,来自大约13个国家的研究人员聚集在一起,分享他们在欧洲和北非从史前到现代早期的童年埋葬经验。
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Editorial
It is with much pleasure that I welcome you to the spring issue of Volume thirteen of Childhood in the Past, the journal of the Society for the Study of Childhood in the Past (SSCIP). The issue starts with a thought-provoking invited piece by Farah Mendlesohn which explores the genre of books for children in relation to historical fiction. Farah delivered the Society’s inaugural biennial lecture in 2017 in Staffordshire University, UK, and we are delighted that she was able to write this piece so that all those who could not attend the lecture can learn more about her interesting research. 2019 was another busy year for SSCIP. The twelfth international SSCIP conference, was organized by Katie Hemer and Sophie Newman on 30th October to 1st November, and hosted by the Sheffield Centre for the Archaeology of Childhood in the University of Sheffield. The theme of the conference was ‘Adolescence’ with the aim of exploring how scholars from diverse fields of research can offer nuanced insight into the lives of those occupying this unique stage in the life course in the past. The conference commenced on the Wednesday evening with a keynote presentation by Jane Eva Baxter of DePaul University, USA, on the topic of the late nineteenth/ early twentieth-century invention of adolescence, followed by a wine reception. The following two action-packed days saw the delivery of some nineteen papers and five posters across six thematic sessions What is Adolescence? Shifting Perceptions Over Time and Space; The Written Lives of Adolescents; The Material Culture of Adolescence; Little Adults? Rites of Passage from Childhood to Adulthood; Deviancy, Rebellion, and Punishment, and Advances in Accessing Adolescence in Bioarchaeology. On the Friday morning Mary Lewis of the University of Reading, UK, delivered a keynote talk on the topic of the bioarchaeology of adolescence. The conference also saw the introduction of a prize for the best student podium presentation kindly sponsored by the journal Antiquity. This was awarded to Katherine Woodhouse of Loughborough University, UK, for her paper entitled ‘Rebels With a Cause: Conversion and “Meaningful” Rebellion in Eighteenth-Century Methodist Narratives of Female Adolescence’. The conference was a truly international affair which brought together scholars from eight countries and crossed three continents. The Society is very grateful to the conference organizers for all their efforts in arranging the event on this fascinating theme within past childhood research. In addition to the annual conference, a SSCIP-sponsored session entitled ‘Health and Welfare of Children in the Past’ was organized by Esme Hookway and Kirsty Squires of Staffordshire University at the 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology which took place on the 10th–14th April in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Speakers from New Zealand, Mexico, and the UK came together to explore a range of topics, including childhood health and disease, the care of children, funerary treatment, and the welfare of children in the work-place. Ian Gonzalez Alaña (independent researcher), Mélie Le Roy and Eileen Murphy of Queen’s University Belfast, organized a SSCIP-sponsored session entitled ‘Systemic Approaches to Juvenile Funerary Rituals. Atypical, Deviant or Normative? Going Beyond Paradigms’ at the 25th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists that took place on the 4th– 7th September in Bern, Switzerland. This was a very popular session, with twenty-two oral presentations and four posters, that brought researchers from some thirteen countries together to share their experiences of childhood burial from prehistory to early modern times across Europe and North Africa.
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来源期刊
Childhood in the Past
Childhood in the Past Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: Childhood in the Past provides a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary, international forum for the publication of research into all aspects of children and childhood in the past, which transcends conventional intellectual, disciplinary, geographical and chronological boundaries. The editor welcomes offers of papers from any field of study which can further knowledge and understanding of the nature and experience of childhood in the past.
期刊最新文献
‘Let My Son Play’: Toys and Games for the Children of the Ancient Near East The Role and Value of Children in the Ancient Near East During the 3rd Millennium BC: A View from Archaeological and Textual Sources Child and Clay: Fingerprints of a Dual Engagement at Hama, Syria Ancient Near Eastern Studies on Children Some Inheritance Issues Regarding Step-children during the Old Babylonian Period
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