Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968

Title: Fighting All Injustice. Katarina Taikon and the Concept of Children’s Rights Around ’68 During the 1960s the Swedish Romani author Katarina Taikon’s had become one of the most respected human rights activist in Sweden, fighting for the dignity, social conditions, and health equity of the Ro...

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Main Author: Olle Widhe
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Svenska Barnboksinstitutet 2018-06-01
Series:Barnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/302
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spelling doaj-b5a963921b8b442dac666427edeaac742020-11-25T03:40:28ZdanSvenska BarnboksinstitutetBarnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning0347-772X2000-43892018-06-014110.14811/clr.v41i0.302Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968Olle Widhe Title: Fighting All Injustice. Katarina Taikon and the Concept of Children’s Rights Around ’68 During the 1960s the Swedish Romani author Katarina Taikon’s had become one of the most respected human rights activist in Sweden, fighting for the dignity, social conditions, and health equity of the Romani People. At the end of the decade she began writing books for children, hoping to change the prevailing attitudes and prejudices against the Romani people. In this article, I claim that her writing for children needs to be understood in connection to its immediate political and cultural context. Placing the overlooked children’s book Niki (1970) in center of attention, I argue that it questions the discrimination of the Romani people, but also rephrases the relationship between adults and children. Following this, Niki not only addresses minor shortcomings of an existing political system, it also targets the social order in a more essential way. Even though the narrative of the book takes place during the Second World War, it reveals the class struggle, interrogates traditional child/adult relationships, and attacks established power structures in ways that interact with the existing counterculture around 1968. https://www.barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/302children’s literaturechildren’s rightsKatarina TaikonNikicounterculturethe new left
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olle Widhe
spellingShingle Olle Widhe
Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
Barnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning
children’s literature
children’s rights
Katarina Taikon
Niki
counterculture
the new left
author_facet Olle Widhe
author_sort Olle Widhe
title Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
title_short Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
title_full Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
title_fullStr Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
title_full_unstemmed Slåss mot alla orättvisor: Katarina Taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
title_sort slåss mot alla orättvisor: katarina taikon och föreställningen om barnets rättigheter runt 1968
publisher Svenska Barnboksinstitutet
series Barnboken: Tidskrift för Barnlitteraturforskning
issn 0347-772X
2000-4389
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Title: Fighting All Injustice. Katarina Taikon and the Concept of Children’s Rights Around ’68 During the 1960s the Swedish Romani author Katarina Taikon’s had become one of the most respected human rights activist in Sweden, fighting for the dignity, social conditions, and health equity of the Romani People. At the end of the decade she began writing books for children, hoping to change the prevailing attitudes and prejudices against the Romani people. In this article, I claim that her writing for children needs to be understood in connection to its immediate political and cultural context. Placing the overlooked children’s book Niki (1970) in center of attention, I argue that it questions the discrimination of the Romani people, but also rephrases the relationship between adults and children. Following this, Niki not only addresses minor shortcomings of an existing political system, it also targets the social order in a more essential way. Even though the narrative of the book takes place during the Second World War, it reveals the class struggle, interrogates traditional child/adult relationships, and attacks established power structures in ways that interact with the existing counterculture around 1968.
topic children’s literature
children’s rights
Katarina Taikon
Niki
counterculture
the new left
url https://www.barnboken.net/index.php/clr/article/view/302
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