TY - JOUR
T1 - Play on the mother-ground
T2 - Childrens games in rural Odisha
AU - Bowen, Zazie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 © 2015 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2015/7/3
Y1 - 2015/7/3
N2 - In rural northern Odisha, childrens outdoor peer play is a pervasive, though barely considered, form of village activity. This essay foregrounds elementary school-aged childrens play as a form of social interaction with landscapes. Specifically, it examines how children at play develop embodied experience and knowledge of place vis-à-vis adult constructions of space and place. The article draws on ethnographic research with children from paddy cultivator and forester families to answer questions around how the village environment and its core resources and symbolic motifs shape play and how peer play shapes childrens sense of their environment. Earth, or soil, for instance, was found to have a central place in both adult-determined productive and symbolic spheres, as well as in childrens imaginative play and games, highlighting connections between the symbolic motifs of a wider spatial context and the internal spatiality of childrens play. As well as a site of symbolic continuity, childrens play was found to be both an index and a site of transformation within Odishan villages. First, as environments change, so do the central motifs and resources with which children play - for play is foremost an exercise of adaptive flexibility. Second, games were found to provide rural young people with an open-ended context within which to develop their own peer responses to their social and spatial circumstances through dialogues, arguments, embodied exchanges and critical sense-making, which accompany their play. These, in turn, impact and transform local spatial contexts, by imbibing them with generational significances. The study raises important questions for further research into the play-environment connection.
AB - In rural northern Odisha, childrens outdoor peer play is a pervasive, though barely considered, form of village activity. This essay foregrounds elementary school-aged childrens play as a form of social interaction with landscapes. Specifically, it examines how children at play develop embodied experience and knowledge of place vis-à-vis adult constructions of space and place. The article draws on ethnographic research with children from paddy cultivator and forester families to answer questions around how the village environment and its core resources and symbolic motifs shape play and how peer play shapes childrens sense of their environment. Earth, or soil, for instance, was found to have a central place in both adult-determined productive and symbolic spheres, as well as in childrens imaginative play and games, highlighting connections between the symbolic motifs of a wider spatial context and the internal spatiality of childrens play. As well as a site of symbolic continuity, childrens play was found to be both an index and a site of transformation within Odishan villages. First, as environments change, so do the central motifs and resources with which children play - for play is foremost an exercise of adaptive flexibility. Second, games were found to provide rural young people with an open-ended context within which to develop their own peer responses to their social and spatial circumstances through dialogues, arguments, embodied exchanges and critical sense-making, which accompany their play. These, in turn, impact and transform local spatial contexts, by imbibing them with generational significances. The study raises important questions for further research into the play-environment connection.
KW - Indian children's peer play
KW - play and environment
KW - play and sense-making
KW - rural Indian childhood
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84929504271&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/19472498.2015.1030871
DO - 10.1080/19472498.2015.1030871
M3 - Article
SN - 1947-2498
VL - 6
SP - 330
EP - 347
JO - South Asian History and Culture
JF - South Asian History and Culture
IS - 3
ER -