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The child sensorium as privileged biopolitical resource: Sensory care and the burden of emotional control in middle class North American childhood
Elsa Davidson
Anthropology
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Article
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peer-review
2
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'The child sensorium as privileged biopolitical resource: Sensory care and the burden of emotional control in middle class North American childhood'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
North America
100%
Childrens
100%
Biopolitical
100%
Emotional Control
100%
Endowment
100%
Sensorium
100%
American childhood
100%
Educational Context
66%
Skill Demand
66%
Sensory Differences
66%
Family Life
33%
Therapist
33%
Disability
33%
Educators
33%
Parent-child Relationship
33%
Neuroscience
33%
Political Economy
33%
Material Resources
33%
Political Resources
33%
Neurodiversity
33%
Reconfiguration
33%
Caretaking
33%
Responsivity
33%
Ethnographic Materials
33%
Sensory Capacities
33%
Sensory Engagement
33%
Parental Engagement
33%
Health Politics
33%
I-frame
33%
Public Settings
33%
Demand for children
33%
Therapeutic Care
33%
Life Context
33%
Archival Materials
33%
Psychology
Neurobiology
100%