Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 74

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 74
72 CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES IN CHILDREN’S CULTURE OF CONSUMPTION speaking these can be categorised into two types of discourses: on one hand children are viewed as power/w/, fickle and savvy consumers and on the other hand as power- less victims who are manipulated and mis- led. However, such evasions fail to recog- nize that life today, for adults and children alike, is always already inextricably em- bedded in consumption. Therefore, although consumption may not wholly define children it powerfully frames their everyday lives (Humphrey, 1998) and consequently, to ig- nore this ubiquitous aspect of childhood presents significant gaps in our understand- ing of children as consumers. This paper argues that such inconsisten- cies in academic knowledge, public debates and general opinion are mainly centred on one explanation: research and academic dis- course in this field is grounded in funda- mentally adult-centric ideas of what it means to be a child consumer. Adult-cen- trism means that children and childhood have been researched and interpreted through adult frameworks applying adult concerns without attempting to gain ade- quate insight into the meanings that children themselves attribute to consumption. Consumption and everyday life of children Prior to defining children’s cultures of con- sumption it is worth briefly examining the key concepts of this paper. The term culture is endlessly complex, however, for the pur- pose of this paper it refers to micro culture i.e. child to child/adult relations. Drawing on a range of definitions culture is here un- derstood to be the values, activities, habits and concerns through which people inter- pret and construct their worlds. Consump- tion as another key concept includes the processes through which consumer goods and services are created, produced, pur- chascd and used (McCracken, 1988). Thus consumption is seen as a wide-ranging prac- tice reaching beyond the actual use of a product. In this sense social processes are present in consumption and vice versa (Solomon, 1983); consequently, culture and consumption are inextricably linked. On the basis of these key concepts, children’s cul- tures of consumption are defined as: The processes hy which the values, behaviour, concerns and attitudes, that children pro- duce and share with others, are constructed through consumption. Nevertheless, children’s cultures of con- sumption are not understood as something which exist independently of adult culture. Rather cultures are non-static, non-fíxed dy- namic entities which overlap and are inter- linked. Yet, there is something particularly interesting about what goes on in children’s peer groups - as we shall see throughout this paper. However, at the same time it is clear that children’s lives are firmly embedded in social structures. Therefore, the question is not only what role consumption plays in children’s everyday interactions with others but also how children negotiate meanings within the given structures that are a reality of their own lives. To date, most research with children has been grounded in the scicntific consumer so- cialization framework. Scientifíc consumer socialization is the process by which chil- dren lcarn, develop and acquire consumcr
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