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Childhood & Philosophy

versão impressa ISSN 2525-5061versão On-line ISSN 1984-5987

Resumo

MARSAL, Eva  e  DOBASHI, Takara. Children's drawings as expressions of ―narrative philosophizing‖ concepts of death a comparison of german and japanese elementary school children. child.philo [online]. 2011, vol.7, n.14, pp.251-269. ISSN 1984-5987.  https://doi.org/10.12957/childphilo.2011.14251.

One of Kant's famous questions about being human asks, ―What may I hope?‖ This question places in-dividual life within an encompassing horizon of human history and speculates on the possibility of perspectives beyond death. In our time mortality is generally repressed, though the development of per-sonal consciousness is closely linked to realization of one's finitude. This raises especially urgent ques-tions for children, and they are left to deal with them alone. From the time awareness begins, knowledge that death can occur at any moment is one of the a priori determinants of being alive; that is, life is struc-tured in advance by its future pastness. (Scheler, Heidegger, Fink, Simmel). According to Max Scheler, death reveals itself as a necessary and manifest constituent of all possible inner experiences in the life process. The cultural and individual interpretations of death's meaning and consequences derived from this insight opened up an ample space for imagined possibilities of ―continued existence,‖ which af-fected approaches to life. In our research project ―Inochi - The Concept of Life after Death in Children's Construction of the World. A German-Japanese Comparison,‖ carried out with German and Japanese research support, we examine concepts developed within the community of inquiry concerning ―the individual's afterlife‖ as soul, angel, animal, star, etc. In this we want to examine whether a globalized media environment leads to a cultural convergence in children's ideas, and whether there are differences between views of girls and boys. Relevance of ideas about death is seen in the example of Japanese children who, believing in reincarnation chose ―killing oneself‖ with relative frequency as a problem-solving strategy. Our contribution will present children's imaginings using the drawings they created within this framework, since these can be interpreted as expressions of ―narrative philosophizing,‖ espe-cially for the Japanese children. Here we follow Mark Johnson who says‖ Human beings are imaginative synthesizing animals‖ (1993 p.152). These imaginations make up a large part of our understanding, not just our beliefs, but rather our socially constructed way of being in and inhabiting a world.

Palavras-chave : comparative education; childhood; drawings; death; narrative.

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