Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 90

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 90
88 CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES IN CHILDREN’S CULTURE OF CONSUMPTION On one hand children may attempt to con- struct an identity using social age as an im- portant resource, yet privately they enjoyed the frecdom of engaging in the very activi- ties they reject in public. In conclusion, it is evident from the data that age is a signifi- cant aspect of children’s identity. School- aged children displayed great awareness of the age hierarchy within the class. More im- portantly, children were very aware of their age identity. They perceive their age iden- tity to be central to the degree of control they have over their lives. Therefore, although it is impossible to be older than one actually is, it is possible to strive to act older and in- crease one’s social age. The data has dis- played that for both types of age identity (chronological and social), consumption can play a central role. Discussion Overall the most important finding pertain- ing to identity in children’s cultures of con- sumption was the contextual influence on identity construction. Furthermore, with rel- atively few possessions in the institutional context children continuously work at con- structing their identity with the material goods at their disposal e.g. bringing toys or other personal items to school. Gender Not surprisingly, throughout the study, evi- dence clearly emerged of the contextual de- pendence (e.g. who is present and where children are situated) of identity. In other words, there were times when gender was the central identity whilst other times age identity or performance identity became more important-a view supported by other authors (Kacen, 2000). However, as Jenk- ins (1996) has also suggested, gender was found to be a primary identity (i.e. a rnore enduring, less changeable identity) which the current study also found as it structured much of what the children consumed. The data presented evidence that already in nursery children displayed clear gender- based stereotyping of toys; furthermore, there was generally consensus on which toys were gender neutral. Later, in P2/P3, the boys in particular tended to demonstrate strong feelings of disgust towards dolls and other items they considered too feminine - a behaviour Thome (1993) called rituals of pollution. Studies out with marketing (Aydt and Corsaro, 2003; Corsaro, 1997; Thorne, 1993) support this finding and go on to sug- gest that in neighbourhood social groups, gender is less significant than in institutional settings. Furthermore, Aydt and Corsaro (2003) have highlighted that gender segre- gation peaks at around 6-8 years of age - which corresponds with the present study. However, there are children who do not con- form to stereotypical gender norms and pre- fer toys considered appropriate for the op- posite sex. This behaviour, most especially when the “deviants” were boys, was sub- ject to negative remarks by other children. In their study of social isolation among early adolescent groups Evans and Eder (1993) found one of the three factors that led chil- dren to be isolated was violating gendei' norms. Therefore, it is evident that gendered consumer behaviour can - already at nurs- ery age, lead to negative reactions from oth- ers.
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