“I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings

War and conflict have always been an integral part of humankind, posing significant threats to humanity. This article investigates young children’s conceptualisation of war and peace through their drawings. Taking a qualitative, interpretive research paradigm, eight five‐year‐old children who had ne...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Josephine Deguara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2024-10-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/8587
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849221165312114688
author Josephine Deguara
author_facet Josephine Deguara
author_sort Josephine Deguara
collection DOAJ
description War and conflict have always been an integral part of humankind, posing significant threats to humanity. This article investigates young children’s conceptualisation of war and peace through their drawings. Taking a qualitative, interpretive research paradigm, eight five‐year‐old children who had never experienced war first‐hand were invited to draw pictures depicting their understandings of war and peace accompanied by their narratives. The drawing and talk processes were video‐recorded. Drawing on the theory of social semiotics, this study considers drawing as a multimodal visual artefact and metaphorical representation to analyse the content as illustrated by children. Employing a phenomenological approach, the analysis centres on the meanings, feelings, and constructs of war and peace that the participant children communicated through 25 drawings. The findings indicate that children used visual elements like lines, colours, symbols, and narratives to convey multilayered meaning‐making, where five overarching themes were identified as the children’s conceptualisations of war: concrete depictions and symbols of war and warfare such as weapons and soldiers; descriptions of identifiable actions of war to include fighting, shooting, and killing; the negative consequences of war including dead people and animals, sadness and homelessness; conceptualising peace as the end of war and as a happy, safe place with beautiful nature; and reflections on war and peace including the dichotomy between the two. The findings show that while children who do not have first‐hand experience of war, struggle to fully comprehend its complexity, they still exhibit a basic understanding of the trauma of war. The findings also emphasise the importance of giving voice to children to communicate their understandings and emotions through drawing.
format Article
id doaj-art-fbac87f2a7fd41178ded074342d9c2f2
institution Kabale University
issn 2183-2803
language English
publishDate 2024-10-01
publisher Cogitatio
record_format Article
series Social Inclusion
spelling doaj-art-fbac87f2a7fd41178ded074342d9c2f22024-11-19T12:15:47ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032024-10-0112010.17645/si.85873765“I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their DrawingsJosephine Deguara0Faculty of Education, University of Malta, MaltaWar and conflict have always been an integral part of humankind, posing significant threats to humanity. This article investigates young children’s conceptualisation of war and peace through their drawings. Taking a qualitative, interpretive research paradigm, eight five‐year‐old children who had never experienced war first‐hand were invited to draw pictures depicting their understandings of war and peace accompanied by their narratives. The drawing and talk processes were video‐recorded. Drawing on the theory of social semiotics, this study considers drawing as a multimodal visual artefact and metaphorical representation to analyse the content as illustrated by children. Employing a phenomenological approach, the analysis centres on the meanings, feelings, and constructs of war and peace that the participant children communicated through 25 drawings. The findings indicate that children used visual elements like lines, colours, symbols, and narratives to convey multilayered meaning‐making, where five overarching themes were identified as the children’s conceptualisations of war: concrete depictions and symbols of war and warfare such as weapons and soldiers; descriptions of identifiable actions of war to include fighting, shooting, and killing; the negative consequences of war including dead people and animals, sadness and homelessness; conceptualising peace as the end of war and as a happy, safe place with beautiful nature; and reflections on war and peace including the dichotomy between the two. The findings show that while children who do not have first‐hand experience of war, struggle to fully comprehend its complexity, they still exhibit a basic understanding of the trauma of war. The findings also emphasise the importance of giving voice to children to communicate their understandings and emotions through drawing.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/8587children’s conceptualisationdrawingsmeaning‐makingpeacesocial semioticswar
spellingShingle Josephine Deguara
“I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
Social Inclusion
children’s conceptualisation
drawings
meaning‐making
peace
social semiotics
war
title “I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
title_full “I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
title_fullStr “I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
title_full_unstemmed “I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
title_short “I Don’t Want War in My House”: Young Children’s Meaning‐Making of War and Peace Through Their Drawings
title_sort i don t want war in my house young children s meaning making of war and peace through their drawings
topic children’s conceptualisation
drawings
meaning‐making
peace
social semiotics
war
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/8587
work_keys_str_mv AT josephinedeguara idontwantwarinmyhouseyoungchildrensmeaningmakingofwarandpeacethroughtheirdrawings