Abstract This is a theoretical-philosophical study, from a phenomenological perspective, about the child's experience in a body-to-body fight. Its main objective is to discuss the specificity of the child in a body-to-body fight situation. For this purpose, discussions in the literature on the phenomenon of body-to-body fight are highlighted, as well as studies on childhood in the intertwining of psychology and Merleau-Pontyan phenomenology. The challenge in the approximations between the experiences of adults and children is considered and a rereading of the notion of body-to-body fighting found in the literature is proposed in order to include childhood experience in this field. It is fundamentally understood that the child fights the way they can and that the adult's presence is an important mediation between children's perceptions and a world shared with people who are no longer children. Author Biography Thabata Castelo Branco Telles, USP Doutora
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