000 nam a22 7a 4500
999 _c86868
_d86868
008 190718b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780415052337
082 _a372.72
_bWal
100 _aWalkerdine, Valerie
245 _aThe mastery of reason
_bCognitive development and the production of rationality
260 _aNew York
_bRoutledge
_c1988c
300 _a230p.
_bpb
_c22x14
440 _aCritical Psychology
520 _aThis study of children's cognitive development engages with current debates about the "individual" and the "social context" in accounts of children's mathematical development. However, the author seeks to go beyond these debates to establish the empirical and theoretical base for a different kind of understanding of the social and psychological production of reason and rationality. She does so by presenting empirical material concerning children's learning of mathematics, both at home and in the early years of schooling. The book is packed with interchanges between mothers or teachers and children. However, an analysis of the apparently innocent subject of children's mathematical development can also offer profound and disturbing insights into the way in which our bourgeois democracy is maintained. Valerie Walkerdine shows how notions of rationality and the triumph over reason, which are encouraged in the teaching of mathematics, are an early induction into the fantasy of control over a calculable universe, necessary to sustain our present social and political order.
650 _aPsychology
650 _aCritical Psychology
650 _aCognitive Development
942 _cBK