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Subjectivity and Children’s Play: The Conceptual Legacy of Fernando González Rey in Early Childhood

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Theory of Subjectivity from a Cultural-Historical Standpoint

Part of the book series: Perspectives in Cultural-Historical Research ((PCHR,volume 9))

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Abstract

González Rey declared in post Ph.D. research that, “My studies on personality and motivation had led me to the topic of subjectivity…” (González Rey, Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 45:419–439, 2014, p. 432). In Fernando’s quest to re-theorise subjectivity and capture the generative character of emotions as the genesis of new psychological systems, he introduced new concepts—subjective senses and subjective configurations. As powerful theoretical concepts, he gifted the international community with a legacy (González Rey et al. (Eds.). Theory of Subjectivity: New Perspectives Within Social and Educational Research, Springer, The Netherlands, 2019) that has opened up new directions in research. In this chapter, I contribute to the now well-trodden pathway created by Fernando by discussing imagination, emotions and play in relation to early childhood education. In play children make meaning as they move closer to reality, exploring rules and roles (as social and societal reproductions), at the same time as developing their own storylines (as creative and symbolic productions). The theoretical debt to González Rey’s work is shown in this chapter through studying how development in play can be conceptualised as a dynamic system of social relations rather than as a collection of psychological functions. It is argued that, play acts as a mirror image of the symbolic processes, social relations and emotionally imaginative (re)configurations of the subjective character of three and four-year-old children’s experiences and psychological operations.

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Acknowledgements

I would like to acknowledge the research assistance of Sue March (Team Leader), Yijun (Selena) Hao, Hasnat Jahan, Carolina Lorentz Beltrāo, the teachers in the educational experiment and funds from the Australian Research Council for data collection [DP140101131] and for the write up of the results [FL180100161]. Special mention of the expertise of the teachers who collaborated in the educational experiment is also made, as their active and intellectual involvement in the theoretical problem contributed to new understandings.

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Correspondence to Marilyn Fleer .

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Fleer, M. (2021). Subjectivity and Children’s Play: The Conceptual Legacy of Fernando González Rey in Early Childhood. In: Goulart, D.M., Martínez, A.M., Adams, M. (eds) Theory of Subjectivity from a Cultural-Historical Standpoint. Perspectives in Cultural-Historical Research, vol 9. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1417-0_17

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