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Publication

Initiating children in language and world: Learning from Dogtooth

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

We present here an account of how the depiction of childrearing in the film Dogtooth, is allegorical of how we protect children from, and initiate children in to, the world. The film undeniably invites a political reading, or otherwise explanatory account, due to its many disarming, weird, and straightforwardly shocking scenes. This is not our aim. Drawing on Stanley Cavell’s account of initiation as an expression of what we do when we “teach” children about the world, we narrow our focus to the very particular vision of language presented in the film. Our account aims to underscore the need for educational-philosophical analyses of upbringing as a way to respond to the recasting of those relationships and practices as “parenting.” The film asserts, we argue, albeit in a paradoxical way, something about raising children that goes unnoticed in the predominant discourse of “parenting.”
Journal: Philosophy of Education
ISSN: 8756-6575
Volume: 2017
Pages: 281 - 295
Publication year:2019
Accessibility:Open