the lesson
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12957/childphilo.2026.96276Keywords:
fiction, discursive violence, oppression, controlAbstract
The following contribution is a work of fiction, submitted as a response to the call for papers for this dossier on ‘racism, colonialism and philosophy for /with children: praxis in non-ideal contexts’. Putatively written by the English-language philosopher A.M. Moskovitz (with an introductory note by Susan Lang), the story describes the ‘author’s’ childhood experience of a philosophy outreach programme. A stranger visits a classroom and enacts white forms of discursive violence upon the children with the perceived aim of oppression and control. The submission is followed by ‘uncomfortable meditations’, intended to stimulate thought and discussion.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 adam ferner

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
copyright for each article published in childhood & philosophy belongs to its author(s). childhood & philosophy has the right of first publication. permission to reprint any article that appears in childhood & philosophy MUST be obtained in writing from the author(s). in addition to any form of acknowledgement required by the author(s), the following notice must be added to the statement of copyright permission made in the reprint (with the appropriate numbers replacing the ellipses): [Article Title] was originally published in childhood & philosophy, volume ..., number ..., pp. ...-...
