<p>This book explores how stretching stories through posthuman and autoethnographic perspectives can produce new stories that&nbsp;decolon(ial)ize&nbsp;traditional thinking and approaches to Early Childhood Education (ECE). It demonstrates how stories can provide a different way of knowing and a way of knowing differently: a way of&nbsp;decolon(ial)izing&nbsp;current discourses of early childhood education within educational institutions.</p><p>The book uses research and practice in ECE to act as a canvas a context with which to explore how autoethnography can become other when viewed through a posthumanist lens. As a consequence the chapters and stories within allow for an interplay between the posthumanist and the autoethnographic an interplay that allows for a very specific type of meaning to emerge; a meaning that traffics in numerous and disruptive possibilities rather than settled certainties. In so doing authors rethink and perturb the notion of child-centered approaches toknowing be(com)ing and doing within the Early Childhood Education context.</p>
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