Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces

This study is located within early childhood education, early childhood intervention and childhood dis/ability studies. The aim of the thesis is to explore the concept of ontoepistemic injustice for autistic children with/in educational and therapeutic settings. Current pedagogies and interventions...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Babamia, Sumaya
Other Authors: Murris, Karin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Education 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614526530125824
access_status_str Open Access
author Babamia, Sumaya
author2 Murris, Karin
author_browse Babamia, Sumaya
Murris, Karin
author_facet Murris, Karin
Babamia, Sumaya
author_sort Babamia, Sumaya
collection Thesis
description This study is located within early childhood education, early childhood intervention and childhood dis/ability studies. The aim of the thesis is to explore the concept of ontoepistemic injustice for autistic children with/in educational and therapeutic settings. Current pedagogies and interventions are embedded in human-centric ontologies that position autistic child as lacking, immature, and often incapacitated epistemologically. Drawing on critical posthumanism, notably Karen Barad's Agential Realism, the study asks: how might the community of philosophical enquiry be put to work with children who present with significant challenges to enquiry-based learning? How can subjectivity for autistic children be re-configured outside of humanist narratives of mastery, skill and performance? The research questions were explored through postqualitative storying practices where communities of autistic learners participated in a teaching and learning approach known as Philosophy for/with Children. The philosophical enquiries took place at two learning centres in Johannesburg, South Africa. These centres were ‘outlier' educational facilities that accommodated the learning differences of children who were deemed to be intellectually in/eligible for mainstream or remedial schooling. Despite learning, language and communication dis/abilities, the enquiries produced philosophical thinking that emerged in unexpected spaces and times. Often, the thinking that emerged worked outside of language and voice yet were weighty and imbued with intensity as well as affect. The postqualitative analysis in the thesis disrupts the nature/culture binary which has historically positioned autistic child as being of dis/ordered mind. Diffractive engagement with the co-created data of videotapes, photographs, drawings, and fieldnotes troubled normative theories of child development in early childhood education and early intervention that still rely heavily on language and cognition. Of significance in this study is the re-configuration of child subjectivity ‘outside' of the adult human-centred privileges of language, power and agency. Postqualitative research methods highlighted the agency of the material-discursive and troubled the ontoepistemic status of autistic child as ‘lacking' and ‘less-than'. The study shows how Philosophy for/with Children, when theorised as a posthumanist transdisciplinary theorypractice of deep, attentive listening to children's questions and ideas, contributes to and innovates within the fields of autism studies, early childhood education and early intervention.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42118
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:53:26.899Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher School of Education
publisherStr School of Education
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42118 Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces Babamia, Sumaya Murris, Karin agential realism autism child diffraction education ontoepistemic justice Philosophy for/with Children posthumanism postqualitative research speech-language therapy storying transdisciplinary practices This study is located within early childhood education, early childhood intervention and childhood dis/ability studies. The aim of the thesis is to explore the concept of ontoepistemic injustice for autistic children with/in educational and therapeutic settings. Current pedagogies and interventions are embedded in human-centric ontologies that position autistic child as lacking, immature, and often incapacitated epistemologically. Drawing on critical posthumanism, notably Karen Barad's Agential Realism, the study asks: how might the community of philosophical enquiry be put to work with children who present with significant challenges to enquiry-based learning? How can subjectivity for autistic children be re-configured outside of humanist narratives of mastery, skill and performance? The research questions were explored through postqualitative storying practices where communities of autistic learners participated in a teaching and learning approach known as Philosophy for/with Children. The philosophical enquiries took place at two learning centres in Johannesburg, South Africa. These centres were ‘outlier' educational facilities that accommodated the learning differences of children who were deemed to be intellectually in/eligible for mainstream or remedial schooling. Despite learning, language and communication dis/abilities, the enquiries produced philosophical thinking that emerged in unexpected spaces and times. Often, the thinking that emerged worked outside of language and voice yet were weighty and imbued with intensity as well as affect. The postqualitative analysis in the thesis disrupts the nature/culture binary which has historically positioned autistic child as being of dis/ordered mind. Diffractive engagement with the co-created data of videotapes, photographs, drawings, and fieldnotes troubled normative theories of child development in early childhood education and early intervention that still rely heavily on language and cognition. Of significance in this study is the re-configuration of child subjectivity ‘outside' of the adult human-centred privileges of language, power and agency. Postqualitative research methods highlighted the agency of the material-discursive and troubled the ontoepistemic status of autistic child as ‘lacking' and ‘less-than'. The study shows how Philosophy for/with Children, when theorised as a posthumanist transdisciplinary theorypractice of deep, attentive listening to children's questions and ideas, contributes to and innovates within the fields of autism studies, early childhood education and early intervention. 2025-11-06T09:08:52Z 2025-11-06T09:08:52Z 2025 2025-11-06T09:05:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42118 en eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle agential realism
autism
child
diffraction
education
ontoepistemic justice
Philosophy for/with Children
posthumanism
postqualitative research
speech-language therapy
storying
transdisciplinary practices
Babamia, Sumaya
Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
title_full Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
title_fullStr Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
title_full_unstemmed Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
title_short Philosophical enquiry and autism: story/ing/ied bags of unexpected human and more-than-human encounters in speech-language therapy and classroom spaces
title_sort philosophical enquiry and autism story ing ied bags of unexpected human and more than human encounters in speech language therapy and classroom spaces
topic agential realism
autism
child
diffraction
education
ontoepistemic justice
Philosophy for/with Children
posthumanism
postqualitative research
speech-language therapy
storying
transdisciplinary practices
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42118
work_keys_str_mv AT babamiasumaya philosophicalenquiryandautismstoryingiedbagsofunexpectedhumanandmorethanhumanencountersinspeechlanguagetherapyandclassroomspaces