本雅明

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Childhood Studies Pub Date : 2021-11-23 DOI:10.5860/choice.33-6221
W. Benjamin, S. Unseld, I. Scheurmann, Konrad Scheurmann, T. Nevill
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引用次数: 71

摘要

文化理论家和政治哲学家瓦尔特·本雅明(1892-d)1940年)反映了儿童的思维过程和想象生活,无论是在专门的著作中,还是在他的主要作品中。本杰明年轻时曾写过批评高中教育的文章,他是德国青年运动(German Youth Movement)的支持者,直到他对该党的民族主义论调感到失望。后来,本杰明的工作转向了儿童早期,并采取了多种形式:他收集古玩儿童书籍;记录他幼子的言论和意见;为儿童做无线电广播;写了一本自己在柏林的童年回忆录;他还专门写了一些散文片段,讲述年轻人的戏剧,游戏,玩具,以及童年阅读的神圣品质。受德国浪漫主义观点的影响,儿童视觉的纯粹性消除了主客体障碍,本杰明在这些作品中提出,在与直接地点发展强烈关系的过程中,儿童同时吸收并激活了自然或人造物体的内在品质。本雅明还认为,从他年幼儿子的话语和他童年误解的神奇共鸣中可以看出,语言游戏对记忆图像和想象力的形成至关重要。然而,他并没有呈现出一种理想化的童年图景,因为孩子们既处于毁灭的循环中,也处于更新的循环中,与日常生活的碎片玩耍对孩子自主性的成长至关重要——就像模仿行为和沉浸在书中及其插图的想象世界中一样。除了这些对儿童智力和想象力发展的观察,本杰明还在儿童广播中担任导师的角色,寻求鼓励年轻人的历史和政治意识。他回到了他的学生对教育的兴趣,在殖民地和无产阶级教育学的性质的论文,并在无产阶级儿童戏剧的宣言。最初,本雅明关于童年的著作在英语世界很少受到批评,部分原因是它们逐渐出现在英语翻译中。直到最近几十年,本雅明关于童年、游戏和教育的启发性反思的意义才变得明显,而自传体《柏林童年》(1900年左右)被认为是对记忆和唯物史学的思考的一系列“思想形象”的表达,这对他的哲学至关重要。
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Walter Benjamin
Cultural theorist and political philosopher Walter Benjamin (b. 1892–d. 1940) reflected on the thought processes and imaginative life of the child both in dedicated writings and, tangentially, in his major works. As a young man Benjamin wrote essays critical of high school education, and he was a supporter of the German Youth Movement until he became disillusioned with its nationalist tone. Subsequently Benjamin’s engagement shifted toward early childhood and took many forms: he collected antique children’s books; recorded the sayings and opinions of his infant son; made radio broadcasts for children; composed a memoir of his own childhood years in Berlin; and devoted a number of prose fragments to aspects of drama for young people, play, toys, and the numinous qualities of childhood reading. Influenced by the German Romantic view of the purity of a child’s vision that removes the subject-object barrier, Benjamin suggests in these works that in the course of developing an intense relationship with its immediate locality the child simultaneously absorbs and animates the innate qualities of the natural or manufactured object. Benjamin also regarded language play, witnessed in the utterances of his young son and the magical resonance of his own childhood misunderstandings, as essential to the formation of memory images and the imagination. He does not, however, present an idealized vision of childhood, since children are engaged in a cycle of destruction as well as renewal, and play with the detritus of daily life is essential to the growth of the child’s autonomy—as indeed are acts of mimesis and an immersion in the imaginative world of the book and its illustration. Alongside these observations on the child’s intellectual and imaginative development, Benjamin assumes the role of mentor in broadcasts for children that seek to encourage a historical and political consciousness in the young. He returns to his student interest in education in essays on the nature of colonial and proletarian pedagogy, and in a manifesto on proletarian children’s theater. Initially, little critical attention was paid to Benjamin’s writings on childhood in the English-speaking world, partly because of their gradual appearance in English translation. It is only in recent decades that the significance of Benjamin’s illuminating reflections on childhood, play, and education has become apparent, and that the autobiographical Berlin Childhood around 1900) has gained recognition as an expression in serial “thought-images” of the speculation on memory and materialist historiography that is essential to his philosophy.
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来源期刊
Journal of Childhood Studies
Journal of Childhood Studies EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
自引率
11.10%
发文量
20
审稿时长
42 weeks
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