Journal of Childhood, Education & Society
Volume 2, Issue 1, 2021, 69-86
ISSN: 2717-638X
DOI: 10.37291/2717638X.20212169
Review Article
A posthuman perspective on early literacy: A literature
review
Zhen Lin 1, Guofang Li 2
Abstract: Drawing on research about young children’s literacy development, this
review article discusses a recent paradigmatic turn for understanding the child and
childhood from human-centerism to posthumanism. Building on the new materialist
tradition (e.g., Barad, 2007) and the assemblage theory of Deleuze and Guattari (1987,
1997), the posthuman lens enables researchers and educators to see children as parts of
entangled networks of relationships who continuously intra-act with their peers, teachers,
materials, and the other nonhuman entities and activities produced constantly by the
child-material entanglements. As such, the posthumanist perspective expands the current
research on early literacy by offering new possibilities for re-conceptualizing the child, the
materials or resources for early literacy, and the meaning of childhood and children’s play.
These new ways of seeing the child, the materials, and childhood have also generated new
pedagogical practices that are material-oriented, intra-active, and flexible. The review
concludes by providing directions for conducting research from a posthuman perspective
in the field of early literacy education.
Article History
Received: 01 November 2020
Accepted: 18 December 2020
Keywords
Early literacy;
Posthumanism; Materials;
Nonhuman entities; Child
and childhood
Introduction
Over the past few decades, there have been continuing inter-disciplinary shifts and
reconceptualizations regarding how researchers and educators approach early literacy and language
learning. One recent advancement examines the multimodal nature of early literacy development, seeing
early literacy practices as involving multiple symbolic systems in real-world contexts (e.g., Jewitt, 2011;
Kress, 1997, 2011). While early language is viewed as playing a fundamental role in young children’s
meaning-making, multiple modes of children’s representations and the myriad materials within the
different sociocultural contexts also impact their early meaning-making (e.g., Dobinson & Dunworth, 2019;
Hill, 2020; Narey, 2017). Children’s multimodal interactions with differential materials (such as making
pillows as cars or playing with the cardboard box as a pirate ship) are seen as “communications” through
which children strategically choose and use actions, materials, and artifacts for a communicative purpose
(Kress, 1997, p. 9).
The multimodal perspective expands the common assumptions that emphasize the nature of early
literacy practices as human endeavours and lies on what children do “with each other” and “to materials”
to learn to communicate (Kuby & Crawford, 2018, p. 21), whereas the posthuman perspective moves
beyond the multimodal perspective and prioritizes children’s ways of doing/knowing/being literacies and
their unexpected and emergent literacy practices with materials and other nonhuman entities (e.g., Hackett
& Rautio, 2019; Hackett & Somerville, 2017; Kuby, Spector, & Thiel, 2019). Researchers, therefore, note that
this posthuman lens foregrounds the agency of nonhumans (e.g., materials, animals, and contexts) and
humans (children) in co-constructing meanings; they also believe that the lens enables them to theorize and
_____________
1 The University of British Columbia, Faculty of Education, Language and Literacy Education, Vancouver, Canada, e-mail: zhen.lin@alumni.ubc.ca, ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7790-1630
2 The University of British Columbia, Faculty of Education, Language and Literacy Education, Vancouver, Canada, e-mail: guofang.li@ubc.ca, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-
0002-5523-6892
©2021 Journal of Childhood, Education & Society. This is an open access article under the CC BY- NC- ND license.
Zhen LIN & Guofang LI
examine materials as active agents in producing discourses and realities, further disturbing the humannonhuman or natural-cultural boundaries.
From human-centered research to posthumanism, the paradigm shift enables productive potentials
for researchers and educators to rethink and reinterpret early literacy as emergent, entangled, and
embodied (e.g., Enriquez, 2016; Leander & Boldt, 2013). It adds to what counts as literacy by focusing more
on the process of making meaning than just meaning. The current article reviews this emerging trend of
studies targeting early literacy development from this posthuman lens. This review was guided by the
following questions:
1.
2.
3.
How do researchers employ posthuman theories to frame their exploration of young
children’s early literacy development?
What are the new understandings of early literacy provided by the posthuman
perspective, and what are the pedagogical implications?
What are the implications for future research and practice?
Through responding to the three guiding questions, this review aims to uncover alternative
interpretations of early literacy, the child, and the childhood from the posthuman lens in different contexts.
It also seeks to provide a snapshot of how posthumanist theories influence early literacy educators in
fostering early literacy development in their classrooms and beyond. Further, this review will also shed
light on the gaps in the conventional literature on early literacy research that can be better addressed
through a posthuman lens.
Posthumanism in early literacy: An overview of key concepts and approaches
While there is a variety of scholarship to interpret posthumanism, two main approaches have been
taken in the field of early education: agential realism in the new materialist tradition (e.g., Barad, 2007; Coole
& Frost, 2010) and the assemblage theory of Deleuze and Guattari (1987, 1997).
New materialism asserts that all human and nonhuman entities in the world are matters and that
knowledge and phenomenon emerge from the continuous and various encounters among living and
nonliving entities (e.g., Barad, 2007; Bogost, 2012; Braidotti, 2013; Žižek, 2014). Sanzo (2018) validates that
new materialism has been coined as early as the 1990s as “a theoretical turn away from the persistent
dualism in modern and humanist traditions whose influences are present in much of cultural theory”
(n. p.). One key approach within new materialism was taken up in early literacy research was Barad’s (2007)
agential realism. Building on the “quantum ontology” that emphasizes connectivity and relationality of
different entities in the world, the concept of agential realism further sees the world as comprised of
phenomena or objects that are products of “the ontological inseparability/entanglement of intra-acting
agencies” (p. 139). In a phenomenon, actants including human and nonhuman objects do not pre-exist but
come into being through their entanglements with material beings in the more-than-human world, namely,
intra-actions, that change "possibilities for worldly reconfiguring” (Barad, 2012, interviewed by Dolphijn &
van der Tuin, p. 55). To Barad, agency is “no longer aligned with human intentionality or subjectivity”
(p. 177) through which human do things “to make changes in the world” (Thiel, Kuby, & Spector, 2019, p.
19) but “a matter of intra-acting” or “an enactment” (p. 178) that generates practices of mattering or
meaning making from intra-actions of humans, nonhumans, and the more-than-human world in the
material-discursive conditions.
In early literacy, agential realism offers a paradigmatic shift from the humanist assumption of the
relationship between active minds and passive objects to the active agential roles of both children and
materials playing together in the dynamic becoming of knowledge and relationships. The shift of
ontological focus motivates the scholarship to ask how languages and literacies come to be and to re-read
children’s literacy events posthumanly by ‘trying to do justice to the materials” (Jokinen & Murris, 2020, p.
49) that children work with during the becoming of literacies and considering the power of things enacted
in the interactions between materialized children bodies and materials.
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A posthuman perspective on early literacy…
Another theoretical take-up in early education from a posthuman perspective is the re-reading of the
assemblage theory proposed by Deleuze and Guattari in their book, A Thousand Plataeus (1987). Assemblage
theory explores the way heterogeneous elements or assemblage components in material systems select,
compose, and self-organize to articulate meaning. Building on Deleuze and Guattari, Bennett (2010) rereads the concept of "assemblage" as the "ad hoc groupings of diverse elements" (pp. 23-24) in a
phenomenon in which "no one materiality or type of material has sufficient competence to determine
consistently the trajectory or impact of the group" (p. 21). Bennett argues that the lively kind of agency of
nonhuman objects, namely, "thing power”, manifests through the forming processes of the humannonhuman assemblages.
Moreover, another take-up of the assemblage theory in early literacy research is the interpretation of
affects and components within and among other bodies in order to better understand the child from a
posthuman perspective. In this regard, scholars align and re-conceptualize from a posthuman perspective
several terms suggested by Deleuze and Guattari, including affect (1987) and desire (1997), in order to seek
new insights on young children's literacy development. A Deleuzoguattarian explanation of affect is nonconscious, instinctive bodily experiences (1987). In a posthuman reading, affect serves as a means to
understand the "non-cognitive, non-volitional expressions of life, including feelings, animation, tactility,
and habituation" (Roelvink & Zolkos, 2015, p. 1). The affective approach thus scaffolds early literacy
researchers to explore the complex interrelations of children's bodies, thing powers, contextual-situated
emotions, and material-discursive practices in a specific time and space.
One frequently explored affective dimension is children’s desires. Deleuze (1997) conceives the
human body as one assemblage of machines (or heterogeneous elements) that produce desires. Based on
this conception of the body as a desiring-machine, in children’s play with objects (desiring with objects),
the objects children interact with also offer desire; therefore, the body and the objects emerge something
co-constructive in producing the affect of desiring. Inspired by this notion of desire, researchers such as
Kuby and Rucker (2015) put forward the concept of literacy desiring, calling for studies of early literacy to
focus on the present process of “the intra-actions of people-with-materials, -movements, and -surprises”
when children engage in the process of making meaning and creating (p. 315). Therefore, literacy desiring
encourages researchers to focus on affective dimensions and becoming embodied during literacy creations
but not necessarily a future end product (Kuby & Rucker, 2015; Leader & Boldt, 2013).
In sum, scholars have drawn on different posthuman approaches to engage in early literacy research
from a human-decentered standpoint. All these scholars embrace the vitality of materials and matters and
zoom in on the intra-actions or in-the-moment transactions of both children and the materialistic world as
they entangle and interact with each other.
Research on Early Literacy from a Posthuman Perspective
The literature search on major databases such as ERIC and Education Source using engines “early
literacy”, “post-humanism”, “new materialism”, “early education” generated a large number of results.
After reviewing the major entires, a total of twenty journal articles and two books that closely examined
early literacy education (2-10-year-old) from a posthumanism perspective were included in this review.
Each selected article was further coded by topic/ontological foci and theoretical frames (which are shown
in the tables listed below). After this round of coding, three overlapping strands of scholarship generated,
namely, the reconceptualization of the child, the attention to the materials in childhood, and the
reinterpretation of processes of early literacy development.
First, a group of studies (e.g., Jokinen & Murris, 2020; MacRae, Hackett, Holmes, & Jones, 2018;
Murris, 2016;) focused on re-conceptualizing what accounts for the "child" within the changed adultchild/human-nonhuman boundaries from a posthuman viewpoint (see Table 1). New materialism disturbs
boundaries not only between humans and nonhumans but also between adults and children. The changing
boundaries evoke the scholars to reposition the child in relationships existing in the broader world, calling
for a reconceptualization of the child as the embodiment of flexibility that transforms through its in-the71
Zhen LIN & Guofang LI
moment becomings with the nonhuman objects and the world and creating new possibilities for research
and pedagogies of early literacy.
Table 1. Studies within the strands of reconceptualizing the child
Study
Topics
Age of the child
participant(s)
Murris, 2016
The posthuman child and picturebooks
Jokinen &
Murris, 2020
The posthuman child and vocabulary
learning
The posthuman child and children’s
becomings with materials in the
museum
How the posthuman child and things
collaboratively co-constructed
meanings
MacRea et al.,
2018
Thiel, 2015
6 years old,
8 years old
7-8 years old
Locale for collecting
the data
Home context, South
Africa
A literacy classroom,
Finnish
The relevant
posthuman
approach
agential realism,
rhizome, affect
agential realism
2 years old
Manchester City Art
Gallery, England
the child as “iii”
(Murris, 2016)
5 years old,
6 years old, and 8
years old
A community center,
the U.S.
thing power,
assemblage, affect
The second strand of research (see Table 2) concentrates on the materials for young children’s literacy
development, or particularly the agential role of other-than-human entities in the embodiment of both
representational literacies, such as discourses, texts, and artifacts, and non-representational practices, such
as movements, sensations, and emotions (e.g., Lenz Taguchi, 2013; Thiel et al., 2019).
Table 2. Studies within the strands of the agency of materials
Study
Lenz Taguchi,
2010
Schulte, 2019a
Represnetational
resources
Nonrepresentational
resources
Topics
Non-digital
resources
Non-digital
resources
Age of the
child
participant(s)
2-3 years old
preschoolers
Locale for collecting
the data
A preschool, Sweden
The playground of a
preschool, Sweden
A university-affiliated
preschool classroom,
the U.S.
Schulte, 2019b
Non-digital
resources
4 years old
Bendiksen,
Østern, &
Belliveau, 2019
Non-digital
resources
3-5 years old
A kindergarten setting,
Norway
Crescenzi,
Jewitt, & Price,
2014
Digital resources,
Touch (nonrepresentational
practices)
1.5-3 years old
A nursery school,
London, England
You, 2019
Picture book
Murris, 2016
Picture book
Hackett &
Somerville,
2017
Movement and
sound
2 years old;
6 and 7 years
old
Harwood &
Collier, 2017
Movement
Preschoolers
A forest school, Canada
Wargo, 2017
Sound and writing
First graders
A primary school
classroom, the U.S.
Children at the
early age
6 years old,
8 years old
The relevant
posthuman
approach
agential realism,
intra-action
agential realism
agential realism
agential realism
intra-action
N/A
agential realism
Home context, South
Africa
A museum in England;
the backyard, the
nearby river, and places
in-between, Australia
agential realism,
rhizome, affect
posthuman
theories of both
Barad and
Deleuze
assemblage,
agency, intraactivity
intra-activity
In contrast to the attention to the materialistic entities, studies in the third strands pay attention to
re-reading the nature of childhood and children's play through the posthuman lens (see Table 3). In
particular, researchers in this vein look into literacies and practices generated from the human-nonhuman
intra-actions and entanglements during children's play (e.g., Hackett & Somerville, 2017; Leander & Boldt,
2013; Procter & Hackett, 2017; Wohlwend, Peppler, Keune, & Thompson, 2017).
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A posthuman perspective on early literacy…
Table 3. Studies within the strands of reconfiguring childhood and children’s play
Study
Topics
Age of the child
participant(s)
Locale for collecting the
data
A kindergarten, Finland;
A daycare center,
England
The relevant
posthuman approach
phenomenon, agency,
intra-action,
assemblage
10 years old
Home contexts, the U.S.
rhizome, assemblage
3-5 years old
Three early childhood
classrooms, the U.S.
2 years old
A museum, England
Procter &
Hackett, 2017
Children’s play,
movements, multimodal
meaning-making
Children’s play,
movements,
Reading and writing
Children’s play,
makerspace, and
multimodal meaningmaking
Children’s play, emotions,
fear
Kuby &
Rucker, 2015
Children’s play, literacy
desiring, and writing
Second graders
Wargo, 2018
Children’s play, digital
devices, sound, and writing
Early elementary age
children
Hackett &
Rautio, 2019
Leander &
Boldt, 2013
Wohlwend et
al., 2017
Kindergarteners,
around 2 years old
A writer’s studio in a
second-grade classroom,
the U.S.
A 6-week intensive
writing camp, the U.S.
agential realism
affect, agency
intra-activity
intra-action/intraactivity
In the following sections, we detail the three strands of research followed by discussing the
implications provided by these papers for future pedagogies and research.
Rethinking the Child and In-the-moment Becoming
Broadly speaking, studies on early literacy has experienced three main shifts in researching the child
and childhood, namely, from the psychological territory to the sociological and then the philosophical
domains, although the psychology of childhood continuously and paramountly impacts on policies,
pedagogies, and practices of early childhood education (e.g., File, Basler Wisneski, & Mueller, 2012; Murris,
2016). From the psychological perspective, scholars contributed to the early childhood education domain
with numerous developmental-oriented theories, including paramount ones such as Piaget’s theory of
cognitive and Gesell’s concept of maturation. Aligning with Piaget's learning theories and developmental
trajectories, the child is seen as cognitive (or “i” [Murris, 2016]) and on a linear intellectual growth from an
infantile, sensorimotor, and concrete stage towards an adult, operative, and natural-universal intelligence
(e.g., Anderson & Harrison, 2010; Burman, 2016; Jenks, 2005) where the world can be conceptually
abstracted by and separate from children's mind. As a result, pedagogies and practices regarding early
literacy keep pace with the children’s developmental rule that they acquire literacy linearly “from the
simple to the complex, from the particular to the general, from the concrete to the abstract, and from the
empirical to the rational” (Egan & Ling, 2002, p. 94).
Another perspective on researching the child and the childhood is socio-constructivist view that
aims to understand how the child gains knowledge through and with the sociocultural milieu. The socioconstructivism into early childhood education questions the universal, ought-to-be, and linear stories
described by using developmentalism, as well as the hegemonic position of developmental psychology in
constructing policies and curriculum for the young. Socio-constructivist researchers employ alternative
lens such as feminist, poststructuralist, postcolonial, and postmodernist theories to explore the roles of
political, social, and cultural powers playing in children’s learning and life. Several seminal works in the
socio-constructivist vein regards childhood as an invention of culture and society (Aries, 1962), or as a
social construction (Alanen, 1988), as well as seeing the child as “social agent” (Cregan & Cuthbert, 2014,
p. 12), or “ii” (Murris, 2016), which is “discursively produced through a process of social and cultural
signification” (MacRae et al., 2018, p. 506), thereby disturbing the cognitive position of the child as an
“object of cognitive science” (Murris, 2016, p. 84).
While the socio-constructivism expands the concept of the child, it does not address the shifting
boundaries between humans and nonhumans and between adults and children. These gaps in our
understandings invoke more philosophical discussions of what counts as literacy, the child, and childhood,
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mostly from the posthuman lens. Researchers in the posthuman view question the aforementioned two
constructions of the child as “a pre-determined map” (Olsson, 2009, p. 13) and childhood as an absence of
adulthood, indicating that the child “perpetually becoming and not being defined once and for all” (p. 14).
By reconfiguring the nature of the child with posthuman theories, researchers articulate the child’s body
as an unbounded organism that exists in a human-nonhuman entangled network of the world rather than
representations contained in the linguistic- and humanist-oriented discourse nor production from a
prescriptive, normative developmental process. So, for example, Murris’s (2016) groundbreaking work
detailed the posthuman construction of the child—the child as “iii”, or the posthuman child. The
posthuman child, as Murris elucidated, pays more attention to the not-yet-known beginnings that are
"taken up and materialized in intra-action with other human animals and nonhuman others” (Murris, 2016,
p. 102). A new materialist lens foregrounds the materiality of children's bodies in their entanglements with
objects and the more-than-human world. It shifts the focuses from “what the child is” to “who, when, and
where the child is with”. In this vein, the child is seen as a “unique and singular being with fluid boundaries
comes into the world” (p. 102). Thus, this notion of the posthuman child invites researchers and educators
to take up their investigations and interpretations about children’s learning and development from a new
lens.
MacRae and her colleagues (2018) detailed how these different conceptions of the child can lead to a
different understanding of the child by reinterpreting data with the “iii” perspective on a two-year-old
girl’s encounters with space and objects (e.g., sponge) in a museum gallery. From a cognitive viewpoint,
the girl’s mental concepts were developing, and her learning moved from concrete to abstract as she
manipulated the objects as instruments to develop her conceptual and logical knowledge. Secondly, the
socio-constructivist lens led researchers to interpret the sponge that Matilda's play with as a cultural
signifier, which afforded potentials for the planned learning (i.e., naming the sponge by using language)
conducted between Matilda and the accompanying adults. Through the posthuman lens, the authors
shifted their attention to the agentic role of the "still" sponge and other objects in the museum in interactions
and entanglements with Matilda and space, noting that the sponges “emanated desire, driving Matilda to
reach for them, and stoke them across her cheek” (p. 508). Matilda's seemingly repetitive movements were
viewed as qualitatively-different thinking and becomings that occur in the dynamic flow of movements, or
simply, “improvisational threads of variability” (Manning, 2016, p. 2).
Thus, the materialist approach altered the researcher's understanding of the child to reconsider
children’s being/knowing/doing literacies by highlighting the dynamic and ongoing becoming of humans,
nonhumans, and the more-than-human world. For instance, Thiel’s (2015) explored how the posthuman
child and things collaboratively co-constructed meanings by examining three children (5, 6, and 8 years
old) from low socioeconomic families of the southeastern US and their encounter with a box of fabric
remnants in their playroom. From a new materialist lens, the fabrics served as actants that propelled
children's work, including designing/imagining, manipulating tools, and crafting pieces for fantasy
characters (e.g., warriors) in their superhero stories. Thus, both children and the things were transformed
in the intra-actions among them.
From a posthuman lens, the child’s body is part of the materiality. Jokinen and Murris (2020)
illustrated this point in their posthuman interpretation of 7-8-year-old immigrant children’s hands with/in
visual images of body-part vocabulary in a second language lesson in a Finnish elementary classroom.
With the posthuman lens, the hands, along with the movements and actions of children’s hands such as
lifting, stretching, holding smartphones, and touching the game board, were seen as engaging in embodied
entanglements with each other. Building on Haraway (2016)’s term, sympoietic, which means “makingwith” or “thinking-with” (p. 58) and implies the ongoing becomings of both human and nonhuman bodies,
the two authors further reconfigured the child in literacy practices as a sympoietic phenomenon that is
“always already assembled in human and more-than-human company” (p. 46).
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A posthuman perspective on early literacy…
The Agency of the Materials and Contexts: Representational and Non-representational Resources
Studies draw on the posthuman approaches acknowledge the mutually-constitutive relationship of
children, materials, and contexts. With the posthuman lens, the scope of materials for children’s literacy
construction has been expanded by including all matters, both tangible (such as semiotic and digital) and
non-tangible (such as actional, sonic, and emotional) resources. Most of the research in the stream moves
beyond the conventional, prevalent representational materials for children’s literacy learning such as pens
and books to include a wide range of semiotic objects such as sticks, ribbons, and the untimely dead bird,
digital technologies embedded in children's daily practices for current times (e.g., Crescenzi, Jewitt, & Price,
2014; Lemieux & Rowsell, 2020; Lenz Taguchi, 2010). As well, the posthuman reading of early literacy
recognizes literacy practices as ongoing, unstructured, and fluid, moving the understanding of children’s
literacies from children wielding materials to meanings generating through entanglement between
children and the more-than-human materialistic world, including actions, movements, sounds, and words.
Picture books. In early literacy, teachers often use texts such as picture books to support children’s
reading. A small number of researchers have re-examined the traits of children’s picture books with the
new materialist lens and discussed how to include picture books to generate intra-actions of children,
space, text, and other objects emerging more children's experiences and literacies practices through these
engagements.
From the human-decentered perspectives, You (2019) examined the significance of diverse forms of
depicting the animal gorilla in children’s picture books Gorilla and Zoo composed by Anthony Browne. In
Browne's picture books, the gorilla and other zoo animals were endowed with diverse anthropomorphic
emotions and behaviours, representing the author's ethical position against the dominant human gaze to
the nonhumans. The anthropomorphic gorilla described in the books entangled with and contrasted to
children’s previous experience of animals imprisoned in the zoo cages, further inviting them to ponder the
animal issues with “an emergent sense of ethical responsibility” (You, 2019, p. 34). When children
encounter the human-animal contact intertangled at the realistic and allegorical levels in the books, they
can gain “a renewed intellectual and affective sense of environmental care”, rather than just symbolically
read the book.
Focusing on Browne’s another book Little Beauty, Murris’s (2016) study demonstrates how the
"silent" materiality (e.g., colours, lines, and drawing styles) of picture books saliently affects the ways of
constructing meaning through unpredictable, dynamic, and material-discursive entanglements between
children and the picture book. By reinterpreting the data of a home-reading activity between two girls
(6-year-old and 8-year-old) and their mother on Little Beauty, Murris noted that the realist imaginary
drawings in the book, the colour selected in one specific drawing, and the storyline prompted children to
ponder and question human-animal, real-life-made-up, and truth-telling-lying distinctions, to connect with
their prior experience and knowledge, and to create an empathetic relationship with the gorilla. The
posthuman reading of the reading activity also indicated that the picture book provides both the adult (the
mother) and children (two girls) with creative opportunities to destabilize discriminatory binaries as
provocations for communities of enquiry, and thereby disrupts the adult/child dichotomy by valuing
children’s capacities of knowledge construction. As a result, children's processes of
knowing/becoming/doing literacies are facilitated by the probing, open-ended questions emerging in equal
adult-child interactions built on the book.
Representational and semiotic resources. To date, several studies have focused on non-digital
materials, including traditional pens and papers and other semiotic resources, surrounding and entangling
with children in producing knowledge and practices in specific time and space. The resources encompass
a wide range of human-nonhuman entities ranging from a small one (e.g., a yellow lemon) to a large item
such as a dump truck with big tires.
Lenz Taguchi’s (2010) study focused on the agentic role of children’s play sticks in contributing to
2-3-year-old preschoolers’ literacy development. The study documented the agentic forces of various
material realities such as wooden sticks, shiny papers, and coloured ribbons that propelled children to
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Zhen LIN & Guofang LI
discursively think about and creatively transform the stick as guns, swords, and stick-dolls in intra-active
processes between children, the teacher, and materials. Simultaneously, the discursive transformations of
the sticks played an active role in shifting patterns of children’s play. When children, especially boys,
entangled with wooden sticks as guns and swords, children’s play became war games; while children
encountered with the stick, the thoughts of naming the stick, and coloured ribbons/papers, the play was
transformed from aggressive to warm and inclusive, further attracting girls to take part in the stick-dollmaking process. Subsequently, along with the doll-making play, children began to wonder about how the
stick had been one part of a tree and how the tree as a part of nature depended on natural elements such
as sunshine and soil. Lenz Taguchi thus stressed that “it is the material-discursive forces and intensities
that emerge in the intra-actions in-between the child and the materials in the room that together constitute
the learning that can take place” (p. 36).
In Schulte’s (2019a) study, the material that served as an active actant in producing literacies was an
untimely-dead bird that suddenly emerged near a playhouse at the far end of a playground. The study
vividly depicted how children's bodies detached from their previous contexts scattering in the expansive
playground to the magnetic space where the bird fell. Schulte noted that the sudden death of the bird
"effectively transformed the children's interests" and entirely "redirected the focus of their endeavouring"
(p. 73). The complicated encounter of the bird, children, space, and time generated newness and differences
of children’s thoughts, emotions, movements, and actions, further transforming the patterns of children’s
becomings and knowing individually and collectively. For the individual shifts, a boy became a little scared
with a tense body and partially hid his body behind one girl, while a girl showed her sorrow and readied
a dandelion to place on the bird’s head. For the collective shift, a discussion of the reasons why the bird
died emerged among children, further evolving as a mining of children's prior memories and experiences
with similar occurrences and an exploration of life and death. Meanwhile, a collaborative work of digging
the bird’s grave was done by the children. With the posthuman interpretation of the encounter between
children and the bird, Schulte affirmed the vibrant agential role the death of the bird played in generating
a material occasion and potential literacies for young children.
Another research of Schulte (2019b) documented how humans and nonhumans intra-acted with each
other to produce “undeniable signifying forces” (Iovino & Oppermann, 2012, p. 2) in the drawing practices
of a four-year-old boy, Andrew, in a childcare center. In the study, a dump truck occasionally idling outside
of the classroom window served as a key operator and a decisive agency that catalyzed the interlocked
transformations of Andrew’s body, mind, and his drawing, for instance, the emergent dilemma of whether
to draw a truck as the truck appearing, the eyes fixed on the intersection to check if the truck would reappeared, the exciting shout bursting when the truck showed up, and the newly-added lines, circles, and
dots in the drawing which represented the truck, the road, and the rock carried by truck. Similarly,
Bendiksen, Østern, and Belliveau (2019) re-read three literacy events that occurred from writing play
activities for children between three and five years old. Barad's agential realism scaffolded the researchers
to recognize the performative nonhuman agents such as the treasure chests, the yellow lemon smell and
taste, the flat iron, the mood of expectancy, the blackboard that intra-acted with human agents such as
teachers, children, and the researchers in producing practices, knowledge, and experiences concerning
linguistic awareness, handwriting, and meaning-making. Both of the two studies added evidence to the
vital agential force of materials in producing literacies for the child.
In addition to various non-digital resources for early literacy, a growing number of early childhood
education research also seeks to develop a better understanding of how the differences between the
conventional paper-based resources and digital tools lead to different ways of child-material
entanglements and therefore different ways of children’s being/knowing/doing with literacies. For
instance, Baroutsis and Woods (2019) considered both print and digital materials (such as papers and
digital devices) and proposed makerspace (usually a collaborative workspace in the schooling contexts) as
a pedagogical approach. They designed three problem-solving activities to discover how the materials of
a makerspace altered the composition of first graders growing-up in a high-poverty community.
Specifically, the three play-based makerspace activities are respectively themed by the Hansel and Gretel
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fairy tale, children's prior experiences about something interesting happened last week, and the life in a
fish tank. In Baroutsis and Woods’s posthuman observation, different materials acted as active agents and
took part in the construction of multiple realities (including children’s written stories), producing ample
practices and encouraging children to highly engage in writing and become more efficient and effective
thinkers. For instance, during the second activity, the interesting things occurring in the previous week,
the children, the papers, ribbons, glues, etc. intertwined with each other and generated new forms of
practices (e.g., making a spaceship, moving around the room to check other peers' work, and writing
sentences to describe the artifacts created), emotions (e.g., children’s enjoyment in the play-based activities;
the pride that children demonstrated in their writing), and material realities (e.g., a spaceship, an alien, and
a written text about the alien sighted last week).
Besides, Crescenzi et al. (2014) explored the role of screen touch in preschool children’s learning to
use an iPad versus paper interaction. To compare how touch features in painting with a tablet versus
painting with paper, the researchers found that while digital mobile devices afforded children a wider
variety of touch-based interactions, they also cause some “losses” that need further considerations in
education for young children.
Children’s non-representational practices: Movement and sound. Existing literature also explored
how movements scaffold children’s literacy learning by reconsidering the active moving-space-material
actants in human-nonhuman interactions, which produce new patterns of literacy practices and learning
for young children. The posthumanist perspective re-reads children’s movements as unfolding relations in
which space, time, and matter are always entangled (Barad, 2013). In other words, movements are
rhizomatic, unprepared, and improvisational child-material interactions existing in the past, present, and
future. Particularly, sound is defined as a vibrational movement at a molecular level (Gershon, 2013).
Therefore, a growing number of existing literature in this vein turn to explore the dynamic and contingent
child-object-matter-space encounters such as movements and sounds that generate discursive practices and
literacies for children in specific spaces such as museums, galleries, and forests (e.g., Hackett & Somerville,
2017; Harwood & Collier, 2017; MacRae et al., 2018; Procter & Hackett, 2017).
Hackett and Somerville (2017) reported two studies of emergent literacies conducted in the UK and
Australia. For the year-long UK study, they drew data from monthly visits of a group of two-year-old
children in a local museum and captured some “child-led traditions” such as marching while banging the
drum that repeatedly emerged during the children's visits. The posthumanist analysis showed that
different locations in the museum (e.g., a small gallery and corridors) and the drumstick played a crucial
role in the production of movements (e.g., drumming, marching) and sounds (e.g., banging, shoe scuffing).
The movements and sounds further synergically created diverse and influential affective responses
between children, materials, and the museum. The affective properties of movements and sounds consisted
of children’s non-linguistic utterances, which collaboratively produced representative and communicative
practices and participated in the world-forming moment by moment. For the Australian study, two six and
seven-year-old girls' stories, sentences, and commentaries emerging during play with mud nearby a river
were incorporated. Drawing on Barad’s (2007) concept of agential realism, Hackett and Somerville
regarded the sounds and words as vibrations driven by the mud and the water. Both the two studies
revealed that different repertoires of literacy practices emerged spontaneously through the shared
becomings of children (humans), materials such as the drum, the water, the mud (nonhumans), and the
more-than-human world that sounds and movements partially constituted. As the researchers noted,
“posthuman readings of early childhood literacy offer the possibility to shift the narrative and to reconceptualize emergent literacy in ways that reconcile with young children's being in the world” (p. 389).
Another example of children’s movements is Harwood and Collier’s (2017) research that aimed to
illustrate interactions among children and nonhuman others in a forest setting by detailing the ways of
how sticks coexisted with children’s bodies, elicited actions, sounds, movements, and relations, and
produced new possibilities for children to learn literacies and develop identities. The authors argued that
matters such as sticks and movements with sticks in the forest played as powerful agents to children's
playful literacy practices that were “constantly in flux” (p. 350), thus inviting infinite possibilities for
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literacy teaching and learning. They concluded that the world of a forest which was awash with human
and nonhuman forces had enriched resources and capacities of early literacy education.
A small amount of the posthuman research focuses on the lesser-known modal resource such as
sound in early writing (e.g., Wargo, 2017, 2018). Thinking with conceptual approaches of sound studies
and the posthuman ways of being/knowing/doing/becoming, Wargo (2017) analyzed a digital audio clip
and a tableau that documented first graders’ writing with sound in the classroom and the sensations and
thoughts emerging alongside children’s composition. Through investigating the rhythmic rituals of
“emergent listening”, Wargo emphasized that the sound and the sonic (e.g., a chorus of classroom claps
and tapping the canvas with fingers) as the explicit material referent actively effected on generating
different forms of embodied encounters (e.g., inviting children to collaboratively come together, creating
boundaries of place and community for children as readers or writers, or shifting acoustic ambience of the
classroom) when children and other nonhuman entities such as the mass-produced microphone Yeti,
hands, shoes, and the laughter entangled with each other in the classroom. Wargo further encouraged
researchers and educators of early literacy to ponder the modal affordances of sounds to pedagogical shifts
to generate new creative energies of knowing and doing literacies in the classroom.
Rethinking Children’s Play: Literacies, Emotions, and Literacy Desirings
Building on inquiries about the relationality between bodies and the otherness or the materials, a
group of scholars sought to use the posthuman lens to understand the process of “bringing-into-relation”
(Weheliye, 2014, p. 13) emerging between these entities, particularly the impromptu, entangled, and fluid
encounters during children's play (e.g., Hackett & Rautio, 2019; Lenz Taugchi, 2013; Sintonen, 2020). In
this context, children’s play is seen as a space where children, objects, and places play with and are played
back by each other in and with material-discursive contexts (e.g., Jones & Holmes, 2014; Lenz Taguchi,
2014).
Literacies emergent in and through play. Hackett and Rautio (2019) analyzed children's grass-hill
rolling in the UK and running in a pine tree forest in Finland to understand what multimodal meaningmaking might emerge. Approaching children's running or rolling as forms of correspondence or
relationship with the tree, the steep grassy hill, and the other things existing in children's surroundings,
the researchers discovered the children produced particular kinds of embodied multimodal meaningmaking, in response to the pine tree, bugs, the wind and the sand while running or rolling, a process that
was collaboratively “brought into being” between the human (children) and more-than-human
participants (tree, bugs, sand, hill etc.) involved in the relationships. In this “process of growth and
ongoingness" (p. 1026), a shared meaning emerged over time without pre-intended goals. Hence, Hackett
and Rautio emphasized the non-predetermined and emergent nature of involvement of the more-thanhuman multimodal meaning-making, which was not productions or skills that children possessed or
intended to possess. Instead, it should be understood as “pathways and channels… for the voices and
stories of the world” (p. 1025).
Drawing on the same framework, Leander and Boldt (2013) studied a ten-year-old Japanese boy's
one-day out-of-school practices—reading and playing with texts from the Japanese manga series InuYasha
and Naruto. While the boy was reading, the researchers observed constant and unpredictable nonrepresentational and unconscious actions (e.g., the boy retrieved one headband from his bedroom,
frequently touched or adjusted the headband, practiced hand gestures, and rearranged knives while
reading the manga), feelings (e.g., the boy articulated, “I love this so much” at times), and movements (e.g.,
the boy and his friend moved freely from the living room to the front yard, swung the sword at each other,
and played the scenes from the manga book). These assemblages of discursive things presenting in the
reading and play (such as the performing scene) transformed the boy from being identified as a struggling
reader and writer to a book fan who sank into the chair and read and thought for a couple of hours.
Therefore, as the authors noted, to the boy, literacy activities were not “projected toward some textual
endpoint” but “living in its life in the ongoing present” (p. 27). In short, literacy practices for children can
be produced “through an emergent moment-by-moment unfolding” (p. 29).
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Wohlwend et al. (2017) added further argument for the strength of the posthuman notions in
interpreting children’s play as emergent early literacy learning processes by re-examining the previously
overlooked moments filtered out as meaningless and mess during children’s play in a preschool
makerspace. They recognized the fluid meaning production during the nonsensical play by tracking the
emergent and transient flows of interactions between children, materials, and the preschool makerspace.
Through a new materialist lens, Wohlwend and her colleague granted these overlooked moments such as
non-representational experiences and the free-wheeling nonsense existing in children’s play as literacies
that are “both sense-making and sensory” (p. 445). Thus, instead of the conventional and extended
interpretations of children’s play, they brought newness to the notion of early literacies during play.
Emotions in the playful childhood. Affect and emotions, particularly for young children, have close
interconnections (Shouse, 2005) as emotion is “the capacity to affect and be affected” (Massumi, 2002, p.
15). Much research in early educational studies have been directed towards shaping children’s emotional
worlds through play-based approaches, seeing children’s play as a therapeutic mean of helping children
to regulate their emotions (e.g., Savina, 2014; Zachariou & Whitebread, 2015). Different from these
approaches, the new materialist research turns to emotions and bodily sensations as offering agencies in
understanding the significance of children intra-acting with place and materials with play encounters (e.g.,
Pahl, 2014; Procter, 2013; Rowsell, as cited in Leander et al., 2017), seeking to develop the attributes
associated with emotional wellbeing such as emotional literacy.
A notable example of work in this area is Procter and Hackett’s (2017) study on the “dark emotions”,
such as fear, showing that how emotionally-textured play of children, materials, and spaces is mediated
within material-discursive contexts. Procter and Hackett brought together two case studies to understand
the emotion of fear in children's play encounters. One example regarding young children recorded a twoyear-old boy's movement and emotion trajectories during one museum visiting: He repeated to express his
fear while keeping moving in and out of place to explore a natural history exhibition. The exhibition's
materiality, including light and exhibits, induced the boy's intensities and propelled his bodily movements
to enter and leave the space. In the two play episodes, Procter and Hackett found that the emotion of fear
was “bounded in place” (p. 220). The bodily experience of the place and materials worked on children,
evoking certain emotions that, in turn, acted on characterizing and categorizing human and nonhuman
bodies. In this case, Procter and Hackett foregrounded the agential role of the complicated materialdiscursive forces in the more-than-human world, calling for extensive attention to the possibilities and
conditions produced by the place and materials for establishing children’s experiences. The study implies
that educators need to take seriously children’s emotional experiences in place and how the emotional
experiences connect with children’s body, objects, the play, and the space in order to offer opportunities
for children’s practices including both metanarratives and representations “of self and other, of what
counts as human and less-than-human” (p. 223).
Literacy desirings. Seeing play as the process of children becoming literacies opens spaces for
children to live out their literacy desirings or “the present processes of producing—a force, a becoming, a
coming together of flows and intensities” (Kuby & Rucker, 2015, p. 315) through entanglement with
intangible and tangible others in their realities. For instance, in their 2015 study, Kuby and Rucker tracked
the process of production and becoming a writer of a boy, Neil, who showed no passion for writing before.
Through a human-decentered lens, researchers witnessed the boy’s intra-acting with papers, scissors,
pencils, and tape that generated peers' interests in Neil's 3D artifacts—a station and a train, and the
emergent Neil-peer-teacher questions and conversations about how the artifact worked and how Neil’s
story of the train would be composed). Significantly, the process brought shared becomings of the materials
(papers transforming and being transformed into the 3D artifacts) and Neil himself shifting from a student
who did not like writing to both a confident expositor and a writer who desired to share the information
of his creation. These unexpected and off-task moments emerging from the intra-actions between children,
materials, and others in the writers’ studio served as spaces where the ongoing process of production was
realized and simultaneously opened up new possibilities of producing literacy desirings.
Also focusing on children’s composition process, Wargo (2018) studied 12 early elementary-aged
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children reauthoring Showers’s picture book The Listening Walk in a 6-week creative writing camp in the
US. The author was particularly interested in how children wrote creatively with the wearables—digital
technologies such as iPads and GoPro with fundamental functions requiring connections with bodies.
Through the more-than-human apparatus, including strategic sketches (Leander & Boldt, 2013) and
emergent listening (Davies, 2014), the study looked into the relational assemblages of children, head
harness, boom mic, and the sonic affordances of the GoPro wearable that worked to amplify the ambient
acoustics of the father-child walk described in The Listening Walk. Wargo envisioned writing as a process
of literacy desiring or an “ongoing series of relational encounters” (p. 504), rather than a practiced skill.
The study's findings demonstrated that the intra-actions, or the withness between children, composition,
and materials expanded children’s literacy desirings and practices that effected their potentials of being
and becoming a writer.
A Posthuman Approach to Early Literacy Instruction: Toward Material-oriented, Intra-active, and
Flexible
The three strands of scholarship reviewed in the current paper provide important implications for
early literacy instruction. Collectively, the studies move the field towards a material-oriented, intra-active,
and flexible pedagogy that is open to possibilities and unexpectedness emerging in literacy teaching and
learning for young children. Instead of the conventional anthropocentric (human-centered) and logocentric
(language-focused) approach to early literacy (e.g., Akhter, 2016; Heider & Renck-Jalongo, 2014; Jesson,
McNaughton, & Wilson, 2015), the posthuman stance beckons scholars to question the taken-for-granted
conceptions about what counts as literacy for young children, to focus on the processes of becoming instead
of the end products of meaning, and to move beyond ‘justice-to-come” (Barad, 2009, n. p.) but the present,
“a better, more just right now” (Kuby et al., 2019, p. 13).
From a posthuman perspective, children are regarded as parts of “an entangled web or network of
relationships” (Lenz Taguchi, 2010, p. 152), who continuously intra-act with their peers, teachers, materials,
and the other more-than-humans (e.g., practices and activities produced continuously by the child-material
entanglements). For instance, as Murris’s 2016 study noted, except for the content of pictures in the book,
the colors, the painting styles and even patterns of lines used to sketch the contours of figures
collaboratively contribute to children’s empathic emotions to the gorilla and the communications about
equity generated between the two girls and their mother. Also, Bendiksen et al. (2019) described how the
strong smell and taste of a yellow lemon brought various sensuous experiences to children, then provoking
children’s impromptu writing practices with their fingers, the lemon juice “ink”, and papers. In the two
cases, the notion of the picturebook or the lemon moves beyond our conventional understandings of them
as reading materials that are set out for children to read and comprehend or fruits that are wait to be
described through children’s textual outcomes. Instead, the material traits make them become
“performative agents” (p. 15) that scaffold unpredictable practices when they are encountering with
children, time, and contexts, opening up children’s opportunities of accessing and producing literacies and
therefore, increasing children’s engagements in literacy events. These examples may guide early educators
to rethink what counts as materials in early literacy education as flexible other than the conventional ones
which are “closely connected to making” and “are often set out for children to make or create something
with” (Pacini-Ketchabaw, Kind, & Kocher, 2017, p. 26). Hence, teachers need to be aware of how the
context, time, and materials are organized and allocated and what kinds of knowledge, experience,
learning, and practices might be produced within the intra-activities between children, materials, and the
places where children and materials are engaging with each other and with the contexts (Leander & Boldt,
2013; Lenz Taguchi, 2010). That is, teachers need to “think with” materials (Pacini-Ketchabaw et al., 2017),
being sensitive about the inclinations and potentials of different materials in producing in-the-moment
practices such as bodily emotions and movements generating from child-material entanglements in certain
contexts.
As well, teachers need to move beyond pursuing children’s textual products as the endpoint of
literacy practices and become attentive to the production process of children’s in-the-moment practices.
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Sintonen (2020) showcased how teachers can pay attention to intra-activity in early literacy instruction
through her reflective autoethnographic consideration of two distinct learning processes of creating
artifacts, conventional acrylic painting and digital painting. Sintonen observed that compared with the
conventional acrylic painting with papers, painting with digital tools involved more modes, affects, and
affordances, therefore different intra-actions and meanings. Therefore, for young children, educators need
to make a thorough consideration of how different materials are manifesting and modulating ways of
meaning-making. In particular, Sintonen stressed the critical focus on the “sensory, embodied,
experimental, and playful intra-actions” among “unforeseen smooth spaces and material invitations”
(p. 1330). Furthering Sintonen’s argument, Baroutsis and Woods (2019) proposed the concept of “literacy
as material practices” (p. 250), which highlights the agentic role of the material (including the discursive
and the virtual as well) working with the child and the more-than-human world in producing literacies. In
their study, they closely observed how changing materials from non-digital such as ribbons to digital such
as iPads changed and afforded the text production of children in a makerspace, suggesting “makerspace
as a pedagogical approach” (p. 251) where teachers can shift the focus from materials to the dynamic and
the discursive when children playing with various human and nonhuman bodies. Teachers, as the study
suggested, may also abandon conventional desk-chair classroom-arrangement and hide themselves in “a
mess bodies scattered across the room” (p. 263) to offer children’s freedom to access other bodies and
further make full use of the classroom space. By creating inclusive spaces and decentering teachers’ roles
in the play-based makerspace, children, especially the ones who are reluctant to write and disengaged with
literacy learning, can gain increasing opportunities for literacy learning in the classroom.
Moreover, with a posthuman lens, early literacy instruction can become more inclusive by embracing
the out-of-classroom world for children’s literacy acquisition. The opportunities of children’s becoming
and knowing literacies can be generated as young learners encounter a bird falling down onto the
playground, a wooden stick found in a forest, a truck occasionally passing outside of the classroom, a
spatial museum gallery, or a grassy hillside. In a sense, the children’s educational settings are “[fields] of
possibility” (Koepke, 2015, n. p), presenting infinite possibilities of supporting children’s literacy learning
with the objects, the context, and experiences “that are at hand” (n. p.). In these contexts, the materials, the
materiality of human bodies, and the more-than-human world can collaboratively serve as tools for the
enacting of literacy education for children. In this sense, early literacy educators need to become cognizant
of the human-nonhuman relationality and rearticulate their understanding of early childhood education
as an assemblage of the child, materials, and the space, and knowledge as “a product of relation”
(Hargraves, 2019, p. 192).
In addition to celebrating child-material entanglements and de-territorializing spaces, teachers also
need to remain flexible and open to hear children’s desirings, as well as allow children’s literacy desirings
to live out (Kuby & Rucker, 2015). Studies (Kuby & Rucker, 2015; 2020; Kuby, Rucker, & Darolia, 2017)
advocated that teachers need to break the rigid structures of literacy instructions, embracing fissures
occurring in the curriculum agenda. Teachers should not only value children’s creations that were
purposefully made for communications but also their “sometimes unpredictable…collaborative processes
of creating and the assortment of artifacts they (might) produce” (2015, p. 326). Permitting children to use
open-ended materials in ways that make sense to them would also generate more children-material
interactions and subsequently produce expansive practices and activities concerning literacy in the
classroom. That is, when given the material-time-space opportunities to pursue their desirings of literacy,
students may then be/know/become literacies in the ways beyond our imagination.
Finally, several studies (e.g., Kuby & Crawford, 2018; Lenz Taguchi, 2010; Wargo, 2018) suggested
several tangible practices for early childhood educators to study their own practices in creating in-themoment improvisational unfolding of early literacy. For example, educators can work as educational
researchers, watching, teaching, and learning with children, such as inviting children to participate in the
design of the curriculum to listen to children’s literacy desirings. Simultaneously, teachers can document
their pedagogical and teaching experiences by using a mosaic approach (Clark & Moss, 2001), including
educator journals, photos, and videos and flexibly letting children chronicle their own learning experiences
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into the document. The pedagogical documentation is not about a recording of “knowledge or the progress
of learning goals” but rather “…what questions have been produced…what kinds of materials and tools
have been tried, and what are the potentials for continuing” (Kuby & Crawford, 2018, p. 22). Also, teachers
can reimage the use of instructional tools and materials commonly used in daily literacy classroom, for
instance, linking the picturebooks with the natural-cultural world by adding aural and actional dimensions
to the figurative but static texts to open up children’s subsequent practices such as discussions and play.
Teachers can also include the out-of-classroom settings such as playground, museum, and forests as the
place of instruction, inclusively viewing materials and the space as performative agents in leading
pedagogies and embracing any potentials of materials and the place that learning may take place.
In sum, the posthuman lens encourages early childhood educators to combat the “institutionalized
ageist practices” in early instruction (Murris, 2016, p. 1) and offer alternative pedagogical possibilities.
Teachers of young children (as well as parents) need to become attentive to a broader range of materials,
time, and spaces for literacy teaching and learning.
Conclusions and Future Research Directions
The review of research on early literacy revealed that the posthumanism perspective offers
expansive possibilities for reconceptualizing the child, the materials or resources for early literacy, and the
meaning of childhood and children’s play. Researchers with a posthuman lens move beyond a humanist
worldview that locates learning in individuals to see children’s learning as “a cooperative and
communicative activity” (Murris, 2016) in which children actively co-construct knowledge with the other
human-nonhuman bodies and entities. This reconfiguration of the child shifts from viewing children as
passively receiving knowledge, language, and concepts to valuing children’s active role in
being/knowing/doing knowledge moment-by-moment.
Posthuman researchers also expand the view of materials for children’s literacy learning from
predesigned and intentional resources for literacy (e.g., textbooks and teaching materials) to all tangible
and intangible matters entangled within the process of producing literacies. These tangible and intangible
matters can be sticks in the forest, emotions emerging in the museum, and sounds during the march with
the drum. All these matters, intertwining with the specific places at the specific time, serve as agencies in
the interactions between the matters and the children to produce moment-by-moment practices and
literacies. The recognition of the agential power of matters and materials in producing literacies helps
educators to reconsider what resources can be used to support children’s literacy development and how
the resources serve as part of the children's meaning-making.
This review revealed several gaps in the contemporary research and education of early literacy. First,
with a few exceptions, most of the existing studies focused on toddlers and preschoolers. More studies on
young children at the primary school age do literacies in both in- and out-of-school contexts, and how they
reconcile with formal assessments are still required. Furthermore, whereas the researchers are productive
in using the posthumanist lens to explore materials in contexts focusing on children’s moment to moment
becomings, few studies have taken up a critical view of the posthuman child and early literacy by
examining the inequalities that may embody in the children’s intra-active experiences. Thirdly, although
emerging studies has demonstrated possibilities in grounding posthuman theories in early literacy
pedagogy, future research still needs to explore how posthuman theories can transform educators’
theoretical beliefs and practices in educational settings for young children.
Finally, it must be noted that one limitation of this review is that it did not touch upon research
methodologies from a posthuman perspective. Future research must focus on methodological questions
for conducting studies from a posthuman lens (e.g., Toohey et al., 2015). Major methodological questions
may include, for example, 1) what are possible ethical issues when applying posthuman theories to
research literacy education that is conventionally a human-oriented domain; 2) what interpretative
dilemma we may have when moving from a traditional anthropocentric (human-centered), logocentric
(language-centered) stance toward the ontological tenets of posthumanism, especially in thinking about
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and researching children’s literacy teaching and learning; 3) what alternative orientations and methods for
data analyses are needed to address the ethico-onto-epistemological paradigmatic shift to open up newness
about researching early literacy; and 4) what problems regarding reliability and accuracy may arise, for
instance, how to document children’s discursive, emergent, and complex non-representational
communicative practices (e.g., emotions and movements) comprehensively and how to interpret the
ongoing mutual becomings between the child and the outside world. More methodological discussions are
needed to wrestle with these critical questions in the future.
Declarations
Acknowledgements: Not applicable.
Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Funding: This manuscript and work was not funded by any funding agency or grant.
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