I want to write a brief & very personal thread abt what it means to me to be talkng w/ @DrJessTaylor at tomoro's #TigersAndTeddies. The publication of her feminist book ths Summer2020 takes me back 20 years to Summer2000, whn I published my own, trying to tackle similar problems.
2. I want to talk about ths because t public often associates me w/ teddy bears & babies & sweet connection. But my deepest intellectual roots are in feminist theory, where I learned to think about power & language & t social construction of knowledge. These shape how I work now.
3. For anyone who doesn't know her work, @DrJessTaylor founded Victim Focus & ths year published t book Why Women Are Blamed For Everything. "Written for every single woman & girl who has been told she had to make her life smaller to avoid male violence." theguardian.com/books/2020/apr…
4. @DrJessTaylor & her co-presenter @Jaimi_Shrive
hv just released a new podcast series called The Wandering Womb Podcast @WombPodcast. The fact 500 people downloaded it in 24hrs gives a sense of t hunger for her insights. Plus her 62K followrs on Twitter!
5. Wandering Womb? Yes! I loved seeing that. Because I too was talking about the history of women's psychiatric 'diagnoses', those 20 years ago. 1854: "Women's reproductive organs are closely interwoven with erratic and disordered intellectual and moral manifestations."
6. Here is @DrJessTaylor & @bindelj , drawing attn to Emma Humphrey's appeal case 25yrs ago. Her self-defence had to be explaind as an 'abnormal personalty' due to what we wd now call ACES. Yep, there is MsHumphrey's case being discussd on pg73 of my book
7. I wanted to talk abt this because someone recently asked me what my work on developmental science had to do w/ feminist theory. And I thought: everything! Feminist theory asks hard questions: Who has power? Who decides how to frame an issue? Whose experience gets represented?
8. Every bit of @DrJessTaylor work is about these questions. I think her perspective shines light on wider debates. Eg: ACES: What terminology should be used (ACES, trauma, maltreatment?) and who decides, for whom? Eg: Making sense of others' experiences - by what method?
9. @DrJessTaylor addresses themes of vulnerability & authenticity, injustice, class & race, which I know so many of my followers are also keen to reflect on. Here she is in 2019: "Only [then] did I become the most powerful and authentic version of myself." victimfocusblog.com/2019/05/20/cou…
10. Our society needs people who feel empowered to think more deeply abt how our views of the world are constructed. We need fierce curiosity. @DrJessTaylor offers this. She pushes us into uncomfortable places. Here she is talking abt the term 'grooming'. victimfocusblog.com/2020/06/30/dr-…
11. So, whn I encounterd recent questns about what "feminism" had to do w/ "the science of babies", I thought it time to be clearer abt why those links matter. They aren't new. Here are my @dundeeuni studnts talkng abt thm 20yrs ago at t launch of "Women and Syndrome Evidence".
12. And here is me w/ my co-author, Prof Fiona Raitt of @dundeeuni Law Dept, as we launched that @Routledgepsych book at t @POWES_BPS Section of @BPSOfficial Conf, held in Dundee that summer of 2000. We were trying hard to shine a light on things our society resists seeing.
13/end. So that is why I can't wait to talk tomorrow 11 July w/ @DrJessTaylor on #TigersAndTeddies. She is one of the people who brings me hope that change is possible, if we get ballsy & brave & curious. It's not too late for you to join us: connectedbaby.net/event/tigers-t…
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On Sunday, I did something unusual for me: I went to the shops & bought a *hard copy* of @heraldscotland because I wanted to read @NeilMackay Big Read in print & sit with its message: "Adults, we need to step up." A THREAD
2. "They fuck you up, your mum & dad. They may not mean to but they do." @NeilMackay cited the same Larkin poem in his article with me earlier this year. I'm glad. We hide from this idea. We are ashamed, offended, askance. We are overwhelmed. So we leave our children to suffer.
@NeilMackay 3. "One of the most important things we can do for our childrn is validate their feelings." Yes. When human children feel heard, their stress-biology changes. So does their behaviour. @garethkthomas said this all last week on Twitter. Lots of teachers felt offended & overwhelmed.
Yesterday I talked about the links between childhood fear/distress and the appeal in adulthood of authoritarians like Trump. Some respondents thought this was a silly idea. I'm far from the only one talking about this, tho. So I thought I would keep talking about it. THREAD
2. Here are researchers Milburn & Conrad talking about their recent studies. Quote: 'We talk at length about childhood punishment and its effects on the development of authoritarianism along with its negative impact on the political system." thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/authoritariani…
3. Here's more:
- "Our research points to a distortion of adult political attitudes as an addition to the list of negative outcomes from spanking."
- "The effects of childhood punishmnt on authoritarianism remained significant after controlling for parents' political ideology."
I hear many people asking: "WHY do people support Trump? WHY are so many Americans willing to support his extreme positions (like the collapse of democracy)?" That willingness begins with childhood experiences. Let me remind us what happens in many American childhoods. A THREAD
2. Corporal punishment. It is still legal in state schools in 17 of America's 50 states. It is actively practiced in 12 of them, mostly in the South. Approximately 100,000 children & young people (mostly African American boys) are subjected to paddling every year, by this:
3. What about private schools in America? Corporal punishment remains legal in private institutions in 46 states. Only New Jersey, Iowa, Maryland & New York have banned it for all children. Lots of Christian parents send their children to private schools. @no2hitting
"What is it that we still don't get?"
This is t title of an insightful article writtn by Cliffe & Solvason in 2022 an academc journal called 'Power & Education' @PowerandEd . That quote is frm me.
This is a THREAD highlightng the important qstns they ask. journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10.11…
2. "In t opening speech for @TIGERSEYAcad 2017, Zeedyk asks 'what is that we still don't get?' Her point is that EY educators are often still not gettng the importnce of relatnshps, at policy or practice level."
Yep. I still think this. Well done @TIGERS_UK for opening up debate.
@TIGERSEYAcad @TIGERS_UK 3. "The dilemma Zeedyk alluded to emerges clearly when human development is closely scrutinised....Relatnshps are key to a child's learning, developmnt & resilience - inside & outside EY provision."
Delighted to see the theorists cited: @grahammusic1, @MoralLandscapes, Trevarthen
A #BabyThread about the sophistication of baby teasing.
This latest post from @DanWuori has been getting lots of shares & many of you have tagged me. I thought I would highlight some of the nuances so noone misses its fabulous complexity. THREAD.
2. So what can we see? Well, first, there aren't just 2 of them in on this joke, but 3! I am guessing that Daddy is filming the interaction, because there are two points when the baby looks directly at the camera as he says 'Dada'. With that look, he pulls Daddy into the joke.
3. Second, this is an example of what developmental psychologst Vasu Reddy calls 'infant clowning'. These are "acts which infants repeat deliberately in order to re-elicit laughter from others". He's learned something of emotionally managing his mama.😀
https://t.co/6gB4L1QBWKcairn.info/revue-enfance1…
How the new challenges faced by women footballers help us in thinking about responses to increased “school violence”. An analogy I didn’t have time to draw on today in my intvw w/ @Fionasstalker on @BBCRadioScot . THREAD.
2. A piece in this weekend's @guardian describes the increased hamstring injuries faced by top female footballers. Playing more often in elite matches places new demands on them. "Coaching methods are failing to keep up." The article explains how coaching has to adapt & change.
3. The @guardian article explains clearly how hamstrings work. We get a helpful schematic drawing & a Quick Guide. "Injuries tend to occur during sudden movements. Footballers are at high risk." So we've linked t biology (physiology) of hamstrings to real life (football). Grand!